On a flop of , play checked to Tom "durrrr" Dwan in the big blind who fired out 725 into the pot. He found one call in middle position as the small blind released.
The turn brought the and Dwan fired again for 1,750. His opponent took a moment and made the call before the completed the board on the river. Dwan checked and his opponent checked it behind.
Dwan opened a monotone for trip fives which was good to take it down. He's up to 35,000 chips.
Catching the action on the river on a board of we saw John Duthie raise his opponent's bet of 8,000 to make it 18,000 to go. However his opponent responded by moving all in.
It was around 12,000 more, and that was about the size of Duthie's stack but he decided to let it go.
Vanessa Selbst and Brett Richey didn't wait around to ramp up the after dinner action. They got all the money in the middle (more than 100 big blinds apiece) on a flop.
Selbst: for aces, bottom pair, and a gutshot
Richey: for a big straight draw and eights
The turn and river kept Selbst in the lead. When the stacks were counted down, she had been all in for 36,850. Richey was left with 1,200 after doubling her up to around 78,000. Watch out, guys. Selbst with chips is extremely dangerous.
The players are now on a 60-minute dinner break. All remaining rebuy chips must be cashed in now for 7,500 a piece, so the stacks (and stomachs) should swell over the next few minutes.
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The cutoff raised to 700, and Josh Arieh called on the button. Then from the small blind, Peter Jetten potted to 3,900. The original raiser folded, and after a few minutes, Arieh called. Jetten only had 3,200 behind (and no rebuy chips), and he put the rest in without hesitation on the flop. Arieh called. "Good flop," Jetten said when he saw Arieh's hand.
Jetten:
Arieh:
The turn and river gave Arieh a flush, and Jetten quickly took his leave. Arieh moved up to 13,000 total.
Michael Binger and an unknown opponent were all in preflop and incredibly both tabled aces!
Binger:
Opponent:
Another player at the table informed Binger that he folded two sixes so he was drawing pretty thin to scoop. It didn't matter though, as his opponent made a flush on the board.
Binger was down to his last 9,000 in chips and tossed in his last two add-in chips saying "I'm ready to gamble for the next seven minutes!"
Facing a raise from early position to 475, Chris Ferguson defended his big blind with a call to see a flop of . Ferguson checked to his opponent who fired 750. Ferguson then check-raised to 2,000 and his opponent made the call.
Ferguson fired another 3,000 on the turn. His opponent again called and the river fell a repeat . Ferguson moved all in for his last 4,800 but his opponent gave it up. Ferguson is up to 16,000 chips.