Danny Suied raised under the gun to 2,400 before action folded to a player in middle position. That player moved all in for about 30,000 and then action moved around to Perry Friedman in the big blind. he called all in for less and then Suied got out of the way.
Friedman:
Opponent:
An ace on the turn would do it for Friedman and send him to the rail as the board ran out . He took off his multi-colored propeller hat and signed it, handing it over to the player who busted him. WHen he was presented with the hat the player asked, "What's your name?"
In a field that is running increasingly short on pros, it is not uncommon to have tables full of new and unrecognizable faces. That simply is not the case over at Table 275, where both John "The Razor" Phan and Burt Boutin have been seated together.
There has been a lot of action at that table, but who knows for how much longer. Table 275 is on the list of tables that'll be broken shortly.
It was slow and took four hands, but we have lost two players to burst the money bubble. One of the players who was eliminated got his remaining money in with and was way behind his opponent's . The flop brought a and that was the end of that.
The other player eliminated was Vinnie Pahuja. Pahuja was crippled the prior hand when his pocket aces were cracked by a flush. The very next hand, Pahuja shipped his remaining 1,200 with and was called by . Pahuja could not improve and he appears to be the official bubble boy.
Once all hands were completed, the tournament director congratulated the remaining players for making the money. Action is now back to normal and we expect a surplus of eliminations now that the bubble has burst.
Players have returned from their break. We are currently two players away from the money and entering hand-for-hand play. The action will likely be slow until the bubble bursts.
Edward Brogdon and an opponent were all in preflop in a hand that left Brodgon with just 1,000 chips.
Brogdon:
Opponent:
The flop fell , keeping Brogdon ahead. The on the turn gave him two pair, but it also gave his opponent some more outs. When the river came , Brogdon's opponent managed to hit his broadway straight, leaving Brogdon in a bad way.