A player in early position made it 16,000 to go and Dutch Boyd called. On the flop, EP checked, Boyd bet 16,000 and EP called. The turn was the and EP once again check called, this time to the tune of 32,000.
The river went check, check, Boyd just about taking the pot with over . The recent bracelet winner is now up to 200,000.
Over at Table 362, Kyle Julius open-shoved for his remaining 22,000 chips from the cutoff and then there was a bit of confusion.
The player on the button released and another player in the small blind quickly folded, but he needed change so the action stalled for a bit. Once the deal made change, the last player in the big blind called and tabled .
"What?" Julius blurted. "Slowroll?"
Julius opened and was well behind until he mad a set on the flop. The turn () and river () were both blanks, and Julius more than doubled to 45,500 chips.
"You took so long," Julius said. "I thought for sure you were folding."
We're going to be results-oriented and say it was a good thing he called.
When we reached his table, Dutch Boyd was heads up with an opponent and the board read . Boyd led for 40,000 and his opponent moved all in for 47,000 more.
Boyd had his opponent covered and went deep into the tank. He was legitimately sick over the decision, and after a few minutes of painful deliberation he folded face up.
His opponent made him very happy though when he flashed for a full house.
Very pleased with the fold, Boyd sits with 130,000 chips.
We've only been back a few minutes, and already chips are starting to fly. All in for 64,500, Patrick Karschamroon found against and duly held up on a to double through. He now has around 135,000.
No, we aren't remembering the late Michael Jackson, that is just how PokerStars Team Sports Star Fatima de Melo described her bustout to Will "The Thrill" Failla.
"Bad," she said to him. "Really bad."
We unfortunately missed the hand, but we are assuming it was bad. Really bad.
After nearing the felt earlier on, Zachary Clark is right back up to 119,000 after finding versus .
It was the button who kicked things off, raising to 8,300 prefop. Clark then made it 22,000 from the small blind, only for the big blind to move all in for 25,000!
With the initial raiser making the fold, Clark somehow found a call.
Although the flop came down a crushing , the hit the turn to give Clark the straight, and following a non board-pairing river, the pot, and the scalp, were his.