Al "Sugar Bear" Barbieri raised from the cutoff and Glenn Engelbert defended from the big blind. The flop saw Engelbert check-raise Barieri, who called. The turn went bet and check, brining about the river. This time Engelbert check-called a bet from Barbieri, but he was disgusted when the "Sugar Bear" turned over for rivered Broadway.
That hand knocked Engelbert down to just 160,000, though his stack dwindled to just 80,000 a few hands later.
Action started with Stephen Hung on the button, and he raised it up. Glenn Engelbert raised all in for 59,000 total, and it was on Donald Auger. He made the call, as did Hung. The flop came down , and Auger checked to Hung, who bet. Auger nodded his head, and mucked his hand. The cards were flipped, and Engelbert was in a world of hurt.
Hung:
Engelbert:
The turn brought the , and the announcer mistakenly said "that doesn't help Glenn." In fact, it was the best card that he could have seen, as it gave him an open ended straight draw. As though the gods of irony were watching from above, the hit the river, giving Engelbert his straight. Engelbert slammed his water bottle on the table, as if to say "I'm still here" while the rest of the table got a bit of a chuckle out of Engelbert's luck.
To say it's been an exciting ride for Glenn Engelbert in the last ten minutes would be putting it mildly. After doubling through Stephen Hung, Engelbert squared off against David Arsht in back-to-back hands. Both went to Engelbert as he held in the first and in the second.
Those pot both got to the turn, which allowed Engelbert to chip up to 445,000 and put himself back into contention. He seemed to have momentum on his side, not to mention a newfound confidence, but it all came to a screeching halt a few hands later when action folded to Arsht in the small blind and he raised. Engelbert three-bet from the big, Arsht called, and then the latter check-called a bet on the flop.
Arsht then turned right around and led out on the turn, Engelbert called, and the was put out on the river. Again Arsht bet and Engelbert, and the former rolled over for a flopped straight. Engelbert shook his head and showed for a rivered set and his third big pair in less than ten minutes.
David Arsht raised from the button, and Glenn Engelbert and Donald Augar called in the blinds. The flop came down, and it was checked to Arsht. He fired out a bet, and Engelbert instantly raised. Auger folded, but Arsht called. The turn was the , and Arsht called a bet from Engelbert. The hit the river, and Engelbert checked. Arsht bet out 50,000, and Engelbert went into the tank. He only had 56,000 left, so it was a huge decision. After two minutes of thinking, he flung in the call. Arsht showed , and Engelbert led out a big sigh of frustration, saying he had .
After the hand, Engelbert was left with just 6,000, while Arsht had half the chips in play at 1.6 million. Engelbert tripled up shortly after, but was eliminated a few hands later. Engelbert was all in preflop, and got calls from Al Barbieri and Stephen Hung. The board ran out , and Barbieri showed . It was good enough to take the pot, and Engelbert was eliminated in 5th place.
David Arsht opened under the gun and Donald Auger called from the button. Both blinds got out of the way and Arsht fired out on the flop. Auger made the call and then raised when Arsht bet the turn. The latter made the call and then check-called a bet on the river.
"Aces," Auger said confidently as he rolled over .
"You're good," Arsht responded even before seeing the cards.
Stephen Hung limped in under the gun, and David Arsht raised on the button. The blinds folded, and Hung made the call. The flop came down , and Hung check called a bet from Arsht. The turn was the , and Hung checked again. Arsht bet, and this time, Hung raised. Arsht called, and the hit the river. Hung bet, and Arsht called. Hung tabled , and Arsht mucked .
On the next hand, Arsht raised under the gun, and Hung called in the big blind. The dealer fanned a flop of , and Hung checked to Arsht, who bet out. Hung check raised for the second consecutive hand, and Arsht called. Hung bet the on the turn and the on the river, with Arsht calling both time. Hung showed , and Arsht mucked again.
Arsht falls to 685,000, while Hung jumps up to 800,000.
With all four players fairly close in chips, play has been very tight recently. The chips have mostly just moving around the table, and Al Barbieri is doing all he can to lighten the mood and make it more fun. Some of his antics have included offering to sing God Bless America, announcing the new dealer's arrival like Bruce Buffer, and posing as a fountain and spitting water out of his mouth off the stage. We can't make this stuff up.