Jeremy Menard got his short-stack all in preflop holding 
and was up against the 
of Elliot Smith. It was another flip, with the 

flop coming down relatively safe for Menard; however, the
turn sure made things interesting. Suddenly Smith had flush, straight, counterfeit, and over outs to take down the pot.
Luckily for Menard, the
blanked on the river and he survived the hand. "What a sick fade," Menard said as he stacked the pot.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
110,000
30,000
|
30,000 |
|
|
57,000
30,000
|
30,000 |








. No one hit anything, but it was Mason's ace high that was awarded the pot.

including Josh Brikis, Emil Patel, and Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott. Patel led for 9,600 from the small blind, Ulliott called, and Brikis moved all in for 60,800. Patel quickly folded, and Ulliott snapped it off.

(Holy blockers, Batman)
on the turn gave Brikis four extra outs to a full house, but the

, Baron check-called a bet of 22,200 and the
on the river. Baron lined up some chips and then committed 32,500 to the pot. The bet was enough to get Laak to fold without so much as a second thought.



.




allowed Sabat to check and Gagliano to move all in for his remaining 36,000. Sabat measured out the chips and eventually threw them in the middle. Gagliano then flipped over
on the turn both player knuckled. The
on the river brought a repeat of action as both players checked again. When it was time to flipp cards Lindgren said "king high" and Paur flipped over 