
and Andreas Flakstad was his opponent with 
.The flop was


, and Crivello was still okay. But the
turn paired Flakstad, and after the river came
, Crivello was out in 150th. Flakstad has 2.4 million now.

and Andreas Flakstad was his opponent with 
.

, and Crivello was still okay. But the
turn paired Flakstad, and after the river came
, Crivello was out in 150th. 
only to see Saout turn over 
. The pot exceeded 3 million.



, and Serock tumbles all of the way down to 180,000. Meanwhile, Saout leaps up to 3.26 million.
Level: 22
Blinds: 10,000/20,000
Ante: 3,000
One of the noteworthy stories emerging at this 2009 WSOP revolves around Dwayne Stacey. The soft-spoken man from Romsey, England was here last year, and he managed to make a deep run to crack the top 100 in the Main Event. This year though, Stacey had decided to take Series off until he heard about the staking offers on ChipMeUp. On the Thursday before the Main Event started, Stacey found out that he could be sponsored by ChipMeUp, and he was on a plane and here at the tables in time to play Day 1d the following Monday. A total of eleven players were sponsored into this event through the site, and Stacey has been the last man standing for almost a full day now, closing in on a second consecutive top 100 showing. Melissa Castello caught up with the Brit just after the money bubble had burst on Day 4; check out what he had to say about this year's Main:
and Serock headed for the payout desk to collect his $40,288 for 145th place.

. Prendes showed 
. Afterwards, Woodley said he folded ace-king. 



, and Prendes is out in 144th. Lacay bounds all of the way up to 4.12 million.
. Richard Whalen was first to act and checked to Eugene Katchalov, who bet 80,000. Sitting with the button, Christopher Bach raised that bet to 227,000.

and Nourafchan 
.

, giving Nourafchan a set. Woodley was now hoping for a runner-runner straight or one of those two queens. The turn was the
, adding to Woodley's hopes. But the river was the
, and Woodley is out in 143rd place.