Yevgeniy Timoshenko raised to 80,000 in the hijack and Matthew Huey three-bet to 175,000 on the button. Timoshenko four-bet to 420,000, resulting in a Huey five-bet shove for about 1.3 million. Timoshenko quickly called.
Timoshenko:
Huey:
The board ran out , bringing no help to Huey and ending his Main Event.
Marc McLaughlin just joined the Mothership, and he immediately got to action, raising it up to 100,000 in the small blind. Michiel Brummelhuis called the extra 60,000 from the big blind, and the flop came down . McLaughlin fired out 115,000, and Brummelhuis called to see the turn come . McLaughin checked this time, and Brummelhuis bet out 250,000. The river brought the , and both players quickly checked.
Brummelhuis:
McLaughlin:
McLaughlin's pair of kings were good enough to win, and he took down the pot. On the very next hand, Denard Petit raised to 90,000 from early position, and Sergio Castelluccio reraised to 180,000 next to act. McLaughlin was on the button, and he put out a four-bet to 320,000. Both players tossed their cards away, and McLaughlin scooped another pot.
Jason Mann fired out 130,000 on a board of . 2012 Octo-Niner Steve Gee raised to 315,000, Mann tank-called, and the river was the .
Mann checked, Gee slid out 700,000, and Mann went into the tank. He mumbled a few things to Gee, who remained unresponsive, and he apologized for a possible "nitroll."
Finally, Mann called, and Gee tabled for effectively king-high. Mann showed for trip nines, raking in the pot.
Timothy Nuter open-raised all in from under the gun for 570,000, and after getting an exact count on the size of the shove, Ryan Riess called the raise from one seat over. All others folded, and the pair tabled their cards:
Nuter:
Riess:
The board brought little extra drama, coming , then , then , and Nuter was eliminated in 84th place while Riess now sits with around 5.5 million.
Danard Petit raised to 90,000 from under the gun +1, and Jonathan Jaffe reraised to 190,000. Action folded to Goran Mandic, who moved all in from the small blind for 485,000. Petit then shoved all in over the top for 1.48 million, and Jaffe got out of the way.
Mandic:
Petit:
The board ran down , and Petit notched another bounty on his belt, jumping up to 2.15 million in the process.
Shortly after Annette Obrestad's elimination, a hand arose on one of the outer tables involving Chris Kinane and Beverly Lange. Following a Kinane open, Lange reraise-shoved for about 315,000 from the big blind and Kinane called right away.
Kinane tabled while Lange had — the very hand she'd mentioned several times over the last few days to have been her least favorite.
She won't like it any better after this hand, as the flop came to give her a pair but Kinane a set, the turn brought the to give her two pair, and the river was the to improve Kinane further to a flush. Lange's hand ended second-best, and the players and surrounding crowd applauded her for her 86th-place finish as she wished everyone good luck and departed.
The exits of Obrestad and Lange make Jackie Glazier the lone remaining woman in the field. The big board currently shows 83 players still remaining.
Dan Owen's table recently moved to the secondary feature stage, and so far the move has been treating him well. He just won two pots in a row, adding over 50% to his stack.
In the first, Samu Rustom raised to 100,000 from early position, Owen called on the button, and Carlos Mortensen called from the big blind. The flop came , and Rustom continued for 250,000. Owen raised to 600,000, and both Mortensen and Rustom folded.
In the very next hand, Simon Lam raised to 90,000 from late position, and Owen called from the cutoff. The flop fell , and Lam bet 125,000. Owen called, and the hit the felt on the turn. Lam slowed down and checked, and Owen bet 150,000. Lam folded, and Owen won the pot.
Oliver Price shoved from early position for 675,000 and Jonathan Jaffe called from the cutoff.
Price:
Jaffe:
The flop brought some chop outs for Jaffe, coming down Jaffe would chop the pot if a seven came, and the on the turn meant another three would do the same. However, the hit the river, and Price notched the full double up to just under 1.5 million
Vladimir Geshkenbein opened to 85,000 in late position, Raul Paez moved all in for around 1.3 million on the button, and Somar Al-Darwich re-shoved in the big blind. Mader quickly folded.
Paez:
Al-Darwich:
It was a near three million-chip race, and Al-Darwich took a commanding lead when the flop fell . Only a ten would save Paez, and he was unable to make Broadway as the turn and river bricked , respectively.
Paez hit the rail, while Al-Darwich is up to 3.3 million chips.