In Event #26: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em / Six Handed Eddy Sabat managed to double through Phil Ivey numerous time before eventually going on to finish in the money at 64th place.
Approaching one of our PokerNews reporters, he imparted us with the fact that he truly does have the wood over arguably the greatest poker player.
After being crippled to just 200 earlier in the day, Sabat doubled in a blind-on-blind battle before it again, and then again before they both had their table broken.
Amazingly they both wound up at the same table where Sabat managed to spike one more double to see his once crippled stack swell to around 5,500 courtesy solely of Ivey.
With Ivey now crippled, he was unable to endure the Sabat-esque return to life and eventually made his way to the rail.
There was about 1,600 in the pot and three players to the flop. The big blind checked, Shannon Shorr bet 1,025 and the button made the call. The big blind then moved all in for a total of 4,600.
Shorr thought it over and then moved all in over the top, forcing the button to fold. Shorr turned over for top pair but was behind the big blind's two pair with .
The on the turn was no help to Shorr, although it did give him a few more outs. Unfortunately for him, the on the river was not one of them. Shorr is down to just 3,400.
On a flop of , a player in middle position bet 1,000 only to have another player raise to 2,500. Kara Scott then moved all in for 850 more. The middle position player folded and the other made the call.
Scott:
Opponent:
Scott was in a dominating position and even improved to a full house when the turn came . Unfortunately for her, the river was the , giving both players the same full house for a chop. Instead of doubling, Scott only has 4,000.