The cutoff raised to 500, Rob Perelman raised to 1,500 from the button, the blinds folded, and the player in the cutoff called.
The flop came . The cutoff checked, Perelman bet 2,325, his opponent check-raised to 5,000, Perelman reraised all in, and his opponent called with the rest of his stack.
Perelman's opponent turned over for a set of sevens, but was in sad shape as Perelman had for the better set. The turn was the and the river the , and another one hits the rail. Perelman is now at 48,000.
Juha Helppi and Todd Brunson have been exchanging blows all day with Todd Brunson recently getting the better of a couple of significant pots.
The first one went to Helppi, but he didn't get a lot of action with his on the board.
A few moments later, Brunson fired 6,000 on the river on a board of with Helppi making the call. Brunson revealed for a full house to rake in the chips and move up to 47,500. Helppi is back to 22,000.
Donnie Peters
Action folded around to one of the many women seated in the green section, Catherine Hearn, and she raised to 800 from the button. The small blind called and then the big blind called as well. The player in the big blind was this fellow named Mike Caro. You might know him.
The flop brought the and action checked to Hearn. She fired out 2,000 and the small blind mucked. Caro stuck around.
The turn brought the and both Caro and Hearn checked. The river produced the and Caro checked again. Hearn fired out 2,500 and Caro made the call.
Hearn tabled for top pair with a queen kicker. Caro mucked his hand. Hearn has built her stack up to 62,000.
After a flop of , Matt Woodward checked, his opponent bet 750, Woodward check-raised to 2,000, his opponent pushed all in, and Woodward called with his remaining 6,500 or so.
Woodward's opponent showed for two pair, while Woodward turned over for the Broadway straight. The turn was the and the river the , and Woodward doubles to about 20,000.
With a flop reading , one player fired out 2,000 with Joe Sebok making the call, a third player folding.
Both players checked the turn before Sebok was faced with a 4,000 bet on the river. Sebok called with but found he had to split the pot against the of his opponent.
On the plus side for Sebok, he's back up to 25,000.
Preflop action added up to 3,100 in the middle and three players still in, including Jeffrey Carris in the small blind. The flop came , Carris pushed all in, and one of his two opponents called with the last of his chips.
Carris showed and his opponent . The turn was the and the river the , and we have another elimination. Carris is now up to 53,000.
Poker tournaments are notorious breeding grounds for diseases -- the air conditioning, the filthy chips, the various germs carried in by thousand of people from all over the world, the general poor levels of hygiene of the occasional antisocial player...
One gent, however, is determined to avoid the risk of germy nasties -- he's turned up to play today with a surgical mask covering his face. Given that it also hides his expression quite effectively, it's probably not a bad strategy at that. We applaud his forward thinking, and pray that he doesn't actually have swine flu or similar.
Grant Levy
With a limper from under the gun, Grant Levy popped it up to 800 to play from middle position. The table folded around and the limper decided to play.
The flop fell and the action checked to Levy who made a continuation bet of 1,350. The UTG player thought for a moment before declaring "4,000" and tossing out a single orange chip.
Levy asked for a count and discovered the UTG player only had 2,300 more behind. Levy grabbed a stack of yellow chips and put his opponent all in, who quickly made a committed call.
Levy:
UTG:
The turn was the and river the and Levy takes it down to move up to 65,000 chips.
After some friendly ribbing from table mate and fellow Australian Andrew Scott about how Levy makes the game look easy, Levy defended by saying, "That was the first player I've busted for the whole WSOP! How does he not hit a ten?"