We've played another 120 minutes of after-dinner poker, and it's time for a twenty-minute break. It's come at just the right time; everyone needs a chance to exhale, we think.
The final 15 players filed back into the room two hours ago, each of them just six eliminations from a date with November's final table and all of the pomp and publicity that goes along with it. That dream has since been crushed for four of them.
Anyone with half a heart has to feel for Matt Affleck. After rushing to the chip lead in the middle stages of last year's Main Event, Affleck managed to make a remarkable follow-up run, pushing deep into this final day. Once again, though, his tournament has come to an abrupt end, and this time it was pocket aces that cost him his whole stack. Jonathan Duhamel had an open-ended straight draw when he got his money in with pocket jacks, and he found his card on the river to knock Affleck out in 15th place and skyrocket himself into the chip lead with about 51 million at the time.
Hasan Habib exited just minutes later, his tournament coming to a close after a remarkable two-day-long short-stacked predicament. Habib was rarely over 15 big blinds since Day 5, but he managed to keep his head above water until finally running out of outs on what would be his final hand. Habib's out-flopped John Racener's , but the latter re-improved on the river to KO Habib in 14th place, sent off by a warm round of applause. Habib final tabled the Main Event ten years ago, but his second trip to the sacred felt will have to wait for now.
Duy Le fell next after John Dolan's out-flopped his ace-queen. And finally, after having been worked down under 4 million, Adam "Roothlus" Levy was extinguished in 12th place to close out the level. Levy moved in with king-queen, but he ran smack into the pocket aces of the aforementioned Duhamel.
Speaking of Duhamel, he's still our commanding chip leader, sitting pretty with about 58 million as the level ticks down to zero. You've got twenty minutes of down time, but don't wander too far; we'll be back shortly to continue the hunt for the November Nine.
Matthew Jarvis raised to 710,000 to open the pot, and short stack Brandon Stevens said, "All right, let's see a flop," as he splashed in the call. It cost him about 20% of his remaining stack to see the flop.
The dealer spread out , and Steven checked. Jarvis was careful, and he checked it back to see the turn. When Steven checked again, Jarvis took his cue to bet 820,000.
"Well, I made a pair on the turn," Jarvis said with a frown. He promptly mucked, slipping back under 3 million chips.
Jason Senti raised to 700,000 from the button, and Brandon Steven moved all in for 2.550 million from the small blind. When it came back to Senti, he hemmed and hawed but quickly called to put Steven at risk for his tournament life. Ah, but he was in good shape:
Senti:
Steven:
The flop was to keep Steven in the lead, and he paired up on the river. His cheering section erupted, but it actually helped Senti in the fact that it gave him four outs to the win instead of three. A jack would end Steven's Main Event, but the safe rivered to secure his double up and put him back in contention.
Steven is back up to 5.64 million thanks to that double dip. He'll likely need to do that at least once more if he's to survive Day 8.
Before the last break, one bet was taking down most pots after the flop at the outer table. We thought things might change when three players -- Jonathan Duhamel, John Dolan and Pascal LeFrancois -- all paid 700,000 to see the flop. We were incorrect.
All three players checked an ace-high flop, . Dolan led the turn for 1.2 million and took down the pot without further resistance.
The pre-flop raiser in the last hand at the other table was John Dolan. He made it 725,000 to go and was called by Pascal LeFrancois from the small blind. LeFrancois check-called an additional 800,000 on a paired flop, . Both players shut down from there and checked the turn and river. LeFrancois showed ace-high, . It was no good against Dolan's pocket fours, .
Brandon Steven limped (whaaaat??) into the pot under the gun, and both blinds came along with him to a cheap flop -- Matthew Jarvis in the small and Jason Senti from the big.
The three players took a flop of , and Jarvis checked. Senti took the betting lead with a wager of 685,000, enough to quickly fold Steven out of the way. Jarvis called, however, and they went heads-up to the turn.
Jarvis took the lead now, firing out a bet of 850,000. Senti tanked and called, and Jarvis bet 1.175 million on the river. After a couple minutes, Senti raised to 3.165 million, and Jarvis called immediately.
It wasn't as exciting as it sounds. Jarvis tabled for the straight, and Senti's was the same hand. They chop it up, and it's on to the next shuffle.
The pots are small at the outer table. If they stay this small we could be in a for a very long night. Most recently, Jonathan Duhamel opend pre-flop for 750,000 and was called by Joseph Cheong. Action checked all the way to the river, . That's where Duhamel bet 875,000. Cheong, who had checked first to act, called and mucked upon being shown .
Duhamel hasn't been shy to open pots but he seems to be shutting down unless he hits. As a result his stack hasn't made much progress. It currently stand at 54.4 million.