Eugene Katchalov was all in preflop holding and far behind the of Brent Wheeler. Katchalov desperately needed a queen or spades, but the provided no help. The turn left him drawing to a queen on the river, but it was not meant to be as the peeled off.
Seat 2 over at Table 278 has been vacant since the start of Day 2, even with a 2,100 stack in front of it. It appears Otto Richard, who is assigned to that seat, has either forgotten the start time or simply decided to let his small stack get blinded out.
We found Phil Laak at his table raising from the cut-off before the flop only to receive two callers from both the blinds. A flop of was enough for Laak as he bet out after both other players checked. However only the Small Blind was willing to pay to see a turn.
Fourth street brought with it a as well as checks from both players.
A river and a check from the Small Blind allowed for Laak to fire out again only to be called. The Small Blind then flipped over , and Laak instantly mucked.
Greg "FBT" Mueller is no stranger to limit hold'em. Back in 2009, Mueller captured two World Series of Poker gold bracelets in limit-hold'em events. The first came when he won defeated 185 players to win the $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship for $460,841. Just a couple weeks later, Mueller took down the $1,500 Limit Hold'em Shootout for another $194,909.
Today, Mueller is in contention for his third limit hold'em bracelet with a top-ten chip count. In a recent hand, Mueller raised from the cutoff only to face a three-bet from Ervin Tormos in the small blind. Mueller refused to back down and put in a four-bet, which Tormos called. The latter then check-called a bet on the flop, leading to the on the turn.
Tormos checked, Mueller bet, and his opponent check-raised. Mueller put in the three-bet, a called ensued, and the hit the river. Once again Tormos check-called a bet only to see Mueller reveal for the ace-high flush.
We managed to get to David Chiu's table just as he was raising on the button into a board of , both blinds called.
A turn allowed for both the blinds to check and an agressive Chiu to bet out. This time however he was only able to convince the Small Blind to come along for the ride.
For the first time in the hand it was the Small Blind who bet out after seeing a river. Chui seemingly very confident in his hand raised his opponent's bet and the Small Blind folded.
The betting on the hand is a mystery to us, but we came upon the table just in time to see Mark Dickstein's being defeated by Sam Grizzle's . It was a big pot that saw Grizzle chip up to 51,000 while Dickstein was left with just 500; needless to say, the short-stack was eliminated on the very next hand.
After a series of raises preflop Jennifer Harman was all-in with against her opponent's . The cards fell and Harman's king high was enough to double up.
Jay Pinkussohn raised from the hijack only to be reraised by Daniel Alaei in the cutoff. Greg Mueller then four-bet from the button and both his opponents made the call. Pinkussohn then checked the flop, Alaei bet, Mueller raised, and only Alaei made the call.
Alaei proceeded to check-call bets on the turn and river, only to muck when Mueller triumphantly revealed for a full house.