We have just been informed that this will be the last level of the night. If a winner isn't determined both players will come back tomorrow to duke it out.
2012 World Series of Poker
Somebody must have put something in the water during the break because the pair have gone three-bet crazy. In the past four pots the outcome has been finalised by a pre flop three-bet. Two have gone the way of Weissman (who has been raising to 500,000) and two to Quehen (who has been raising to the slightly higher price of 550,000).
Joey Weissman raised it up to 200,000 from the button and Jeremy Quehen made the call from the big blind. The flop came 

and Quehen checked called a bet of 250,000.
The
on the turn saw another check-call from Quehen, this time for 450,000. The
on the river allowed both players to check and Quehen flipped over 
for a pair of aces. Weissman mucked his cards and Quehen was warded the pot
Jeremy Quehen raised to 200,000 and Joey Weissman made the call. The flop was
and Weissman check-raised to 500,000. Quehen made a very quick call and both players checked the
turn. The final card was the
, Weissman put out a 600,000 bet and Quehen made the call. Weissman flipped over
and Quehen mucked his hand. Cue the celebrations from the rail.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
8,900,000
600,000
|
600,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
3,100,000
400,000
|
400,000 |
Jeremy Quehen moved all in from the button for 2,600,000. Joey Weissman looked at his cards and started contemplating if he wanted to call. After a few more moments Weissman made the call.
Weissman: 

Quehen: 

The flop came 



and with that Quehen's two pair were best and he was awarded the double up.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
8,000,000
900,000
|
900,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
5,200,000
2,100,000
|
2,100,000 |
Oh, how quick things can change in poker. The atmosphere has changed from a super charged American sing-song to a French revolution. The once super-confident Joey Weissman looks nervous and down beaten, and his once charming rail are now throwing insults at the young Frenchman, who is soaking in every word and growing in stature and confidence. The red, white and blue is now bleu, bleu, bleu!
Quehen raised to 200,000, Weissman three-bet to 500,000, Qehen made it 1,000,000 and Weissman folded. Quehen showed the room the lone
which resulted in a few comments from the rail.
Then Weissman raised to 200,00 and Quehen made the call. The flop contained more clubs than the streets of Ibiza Town -
. Quehen checked, Weissman bet 250, Quehen check-raised to 650,000 and Weissman called. The turn was the
and Quehen made a bet of 750,000; Weissman called. The final card was the
and this time Quehen made it 1,750,000 (the biggest bet we have seen bar an all-in) and Weissman made the call.
Quehen leapt to his feet and threw the
triumphantly onto the table. The French rail rose in unison and French chants filled the air. Quehen is the new chip leader with 9.2 million and it is the first time for a very long time that Weissman has had to play with the inferior stack.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
9,800,000
4,600,000
|
4,600,000 |
|
|
2,800,000
5,200,000
|
5,200,000 |
|
|
||
Level: 32
Blinds: 60,000/120,000
Ante: 15,000
Apparently the players are going to play another level, making this one the last level of the night.
Someone just woke the American rail up! That's right Joey Weissman just woke the American rail up!
Jeremy Quehen raised to 240,000, Weissman moved all-in and Quehen made the call.
| Weissman | ![]() |
| Quehen | ![]() |
Board:

Weissman doubled up to 6,540,000 and this match is neck and neck with forty-five minutes to play before it ends for the night.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
6,540,000
3,740,000
|
3,740,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
5,460,000
4,340,000
|
4,340,000 |
Jeremy Quehen raised it up from the button and made it 240,000 to see the flop. Joey Weisseman made the call and both players were witness to a 

flop. It was here that Weissman check-called a bet of 300,000.
The
on the turn saw a repeat of action with another check-call from Weissman, this time for 420,000.
A
river brought two checks and cards were tabled. Both of them had 
and the pot was chopped up. Both players are now basically even in chips.
