All the money went in on a flop with Tony Cousineau ahead holding against the drawing hand of Chris Tryba and his .
Unfortunately for Cousineau, the turn landed the to give Tryba the lead, and the on the river only furthered his advantage as Tryba moved to roughly 34,000 in chips.
As play ticked over into this current level we found Dylan Linde and his table playing out a pot from the previous 100-200 level.
Linde had opened to 475 and found two callers before the small blind had three-bet to 3,025. The action passed back to Linde and he had moved all in for 6,225 with the first caller folding. However the second caller, and the three-bettor both called as the dealer fanned a flop and the small blind moved all in for 4,400. The remaining player called and the cards were tabled.
Linde:
Small Blind:
Opponent:
"I got my hand caught in the cookie jar!" stated the small blind as he stood up.
The dealer dropped the and on the turn and river and Linde tripled to 19,500 in chips.
Catching the action on the board and roughly 11,000 in the middle, we found Samantha Cohen moving all in for just a little over 11,000.
Andy Frankenberger paused for a few moments before folding his hand only to have John Dolan instantly call all-in for roughly his last 10,500.
Dolan:
Cohen:
With Dolan needing the board to pair to stay alive, the landed on the river to see him bumped from the rail, Cohen shipped the pot and Frankenberger begin shaking his head while indicating he had diamonds.
As our PokerNews reporter found his way to Noah Schwartz's table, he found Schwartz calling Keith Ferrera's 10,525-chip all in.
Ferrera:
Schwartz:
The flop of saw Ferrera take the lead but leave Schwartz drawing to any spade or queen. The on the turn added three jacks to Schwartz's outs, but when the completed the board on the river, he was cut down to 30,000 as Ferrera moved to just over 21,000 and change.
A total of 784 entries make for a $3,684,800 prize pool. 81 of them are going to get paid and a min cash is worth $9,175. Making the final table will net you $59,398. THe break down of the prize pool is as followed:
When we arrived there was 1,125 in front of Jeremy Ausmus who was seated in the cut off position. His opponent, a player in middle position, made the four bet to 2,675 and Ausmus made the call. The flop was the ignition for more action as a 2,025 continuation-bet followed from the player in middle position. Ausmus shoved all in for 12,975 total and his opponent snap called.
Ausmus showed for a gutshot and he was up against . The on the turn didn't do Ausmus any good but the on the river did.