Steven Fager pushed all in preflop for 26,200 with 
and was called by Steve Sung who held 
.
Fager couldn't find help when the board ran out 



and he was eliminated. Meanwhile, Sung grew his stack to 135,000.
Steven Fager pushed all in preflop for 26,200 with 
and was called by Steve Sung who held 
.
Fager couldn't find help when the board ran out 



and he was eliminated. Meanwhile, Sung grew his stack to 135,000.
Raymond Geary was in middle position and raised to 7,000. Cherie Beasley called from the big blind and the flop came 

.
Beasley checked and Geary bet 12,000. After Beasley called, the turn came
. Once again Beasley checked, Geary bet 20,000, and Beasley called.
The river was the
and this time both players checked. Geary showed 
which was good against Beasley's 
.
Beasley is down to 60,000 while Geary jumps to 215,000.
Andrew Cohen, who won a WSOP bracelet last year after taking down Event #1 $500 Casino Employees, is still alive with a nice chip stack of about 225,000.
"There's a long ways to go," Cohen said when asked about taking down his second bracelet.
Nick Binger's tournament came crashing down in a brutal hand with Saar Wilf. They got it all in on an 

flop. Wilf has been so aggressive all day that Binger had every reason to think his 
was the hand he'd been waiting for. Unfortunately for him, Wilf turned over 
for middle set. The turn and river bricked, and after the stacks were counted, Binger was left out in the cold. Wilf, on the other hand, is up to around 320,000. He hasn't skipped a hand yet and still hasn't finished stacking all of his chips.
Cameron New limped from the small blind and Pat Pezzin checked from the big. They saw a flop of 

and New checked.
Pezzin bet 4,000 and was raised to 11,000. With only 32,000 remaining, Pezzin went into the tank. After a solid two minutes, he decided to call.
The turn was the
and New bet enough to put Pezzin all in. Pezzin thinks it over for a few moments and says, "Call." New flips over his cards and shows 
for two pair. "You have me drawing dead," announces Pezzin, who then flips over 
.
The irrelevant river card was the
and Pezzin made his exit.
Daniel Wjuniski raised to 7,000 in early position, and James Buckley three-bet to 17,000. Next to act, David Frazier flat called. When the action got back to Wjuniski, he moved all in for 55,7000 total. That was enough to push Buckley off of his hand, but Frazier made the call.
Wjuniski: 

Buckley: 

The board favored Wjuniski, falling 



. He more than doubled to 125,000, leaving Frazier with just 38,000.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
145,000
85,000
|
85,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
130,000
10,000
|
10,000 |
|
|
98,000
17,700
|
17,700 |
|
|
85,000
12,000
|
12,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
72,000
55,000
|
55,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
63,000
2,800
|
2,800 |
|
|
41,000
16,000
|
16,000 |
|
|
||
With about 13,000 in the pot preflop, Nick Binger and David Aue recently saw a flop of 

.
Both players checked and Binger led out for 10,000 when the
hit the turn. Aue didn't take long to fold and Binger add to his stack, bringing to around 130,000.
Steven Warwick raised to 5,000 preflop, and Todd Lepow shipped it in for 55,700. Warwick called with 
. And it was another standard cooler as Lepow showed 
. The board gave both boats with 



, and Lepow doubled to 116,000 with queens full of aces. Warwick was knocked back to 48,000.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
230,000
127,200
|
127,200 |
|
|
212,000
177,500
|
177,500 |
|
|
200,000
70,000
|
70,000 |
|
|
196,000
68,700
|
68,700 |