Men Nguyen was faced with an all-in raise after he had made it 325 to go. His opponent had 2,475 chips and Nguyen made the call for about half of his stack.
Nguyen:
Opponent:
Nguyen was ahead to start, but quickly fell behind on a flop of . He was drawing dead once the turn brought the . After the came on the river, Nguyen remarked, "I hate tens."
Over at George Lind's table an early-position player had raised to 400 only to have the next player re-raise to 825. The player looked to the dealer and said, "That's not a raise, it's a massage."
We're not sure exactly what that meant, but when the flop came the dealer asked where her massage was, only to be told that "You need three spades to get a massage, not three clubs."
While we had once remarked that a table featuring Gavin Griffin, Ahn Van Nguyen and Michael Mizrachi was looking like the toughest in the room, the players at the table have proven us wrong. All three of the pros have been eliminated before four levels of play.
Gavin Griffin was the last to go. He was in the cutoff when an early position player had raised to 350. Griffin only had 1,275 chips left and he put them all in the middle, getting a call.
Griffin:
Opponent:
Griffin fell behind as soon as the flop brought onto the table. He was unable to catch up with a on the turn and a on the river.
Chino Rheem had bet 575 into a flop that read when his opponent raised to 1,800. Rheem thought about it for a while and said, "You must have the nuts or something. Or nothing."
Rheem eventually made the fold. When his opponent pushed his cards towards the dealer, Rheem asked, "You're not going to show me your hand? It's ok, I won't be mad, I like it."