Steve Bartlett obviously felt he had pot odds to call with any two, as he called an all-in from a middle position player while holding just . The other player had .
"The old four-high call," Bartlett said as he tabled his hand.
The flop was a good one for him: , and his opponent was dead to a chop after a arrived on the turn. The river filled Bartlett with a , and he had transformed his four-high into a near-nut hand.
David Adler opened to 27,000 from the button, and Majid Yahyaei called from the small blind.
Yahyaei checked the flop, and Adler bet 50,000. Yahyaei jammed it in, and Adler called immediately.
"You have a nine?" he asked. Yahyaei shook his head, and Adler tabled . Yahyaei showed for a straight flush draw. The turn came , and the river was a , and Adler raised both fists in victory.
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We found Steve Bartlett all in on a board of . Bartlett showed for a flopped pair that turned into the nut flush on the river. His opponent had called with , and his set was no good.
Olivier Busquet got all in with against Eoghan O'Dea's . We're not sure when the chips went in, but we do know the board ran out , and Busquet's tens were inferior to O'Dea's queens.
Masayuki Nagata finished him off with against Busquet's .