A player with a out in front brought it in and then the completed (Player One). Lisandro made the call with his and Player Two called with the . With the bring-in player out of the way, all three players checked on fourth street. Fifth street would see Player Two lead and both other players call. All three then checked it down on sixth and seventh.
When Player Two tabled his , Lisandro and the other player's card would be flicked into the muck.
Noah Bronstein and Adam Glassman were heads up with the board reading . Bronstein bet out, and Glassman tanked before raising. Bronstein called.
The completed the board, and Bronstein check-called a bet. Glassman tabled for a full house, and Bronstein was visibly upset. He looked at his cards one more time before mucking, and Glassman pulled in the pot.
Dan Kelly raised from the cutoff, Timothy Burt made it three bets on the button, and Dale Phillips cold-called from the small blind. Daniel Negreanu called as well, and so did Kelly.
The flop came down , and Phillips led out. Negreanu folded, Kelly called, and Burt raised. Phillips and Kelly both called.
The turn was the , and the action checked to Burt, who bet. Both Phillips and Kelly called.
The completed the board, and the action checked to Burt again. He bet, and both Phillips and Kelly called.
Name
Hand
Part of Pot
Burt
Low
Phillips
High
Kelly
None
"Where was the four on the river?" Burt asked aloud, wishing for a scoop.
Kelly was knocked down to 13,000 chips, while Burt and Phillips both crossed the 30,000-chip mark.
Jeff Lisandro is having a great day so far, seeing his stack almost hit 100,000 in chips, courtesy of recently eliminating one opponent.
Board:
It was Lisandro, Norman Chad and two other players who took part in this hand. On the flop, three players checked to the player on the button and he bet. One player folded, Lisandro and Chad called.
On the turn, all three remaining players checked and then on the river Lisandro and Chad checked, prompting the button player to bet. Lisandro then check-raised and Chad folded. The player called off the remainder of his stack and then mucked his hand when Lisandro tabled , holding trip fours and the nut low.
When we arrived at Andy Bloch's table, he was all-in during a hand of Stud Eight-or-Better. We didn't see when he got all his chips in the middle, but the showdown cards of his last hand can be seen below, in no particular order.
Bloch:
Opponent:
As you can see, neither player qualified for a low and the high hand ended up being Bloch's opponent holding just ace-high.
We didn't catch the action, but we did notice one player leaving Table 458 empty handed and George Danzer raking in all of the player's chips. Danzer now has one of the larger stacks in the room.