One player had bet 7,100 with 21,000 behind on a board and Dannah Kamp had raised enough to put her opponent all in.
Her opponent called with having turned a flush and Kamp showed . The river saw Kamp complete a better flush and send her opponent to the rail.
Kamp is looking for another deep WSOP run after finishing 13th in the 2021 WSOP Monster Stack for $41,026. Check out her interview with PokerNews from last year below!
Registration has closed with 1,074 total entries creating a prizepool of $955,660. The top 162 spots will be paid, with a min-cash being worth $1,600. The grand prize will be $166,975 for the future Ladies Event Champion.
The player in the hijack raised to 2,700 and Lucia Navarro three-bet from the cutoff before the button quickly shoved. The initial player folded but Navarro called all in for a total stack worth 38,000.
Lucia Navarro:
Opponent:
Navarro had to win the flip for her tournament's life, which she did after the board ran out , giving her a pair of kings on the flop.
It checked to Kerryjane Craigie on a flop and she bet 6,200. One opponent called and the pair both checked the turn.
The river was the and again it checked to Craigie who bet 7,300. Her opponent check-called but was shown the bad news when Craigie tabled for a straight.
The flop read when Gargee Sharma checked to Maria Konnikova on the button who bet 3,000. Sharma made the call.
The river was the and Sharma fired 12,000. It didn't take long to Konnikova who let it go.
Anna Freitas opened to 3,200 and called a shove for her opponent's last 10,500.
All-in Player:
Anna Freitas:
The runout saw Freitas spike an eight on the turn to crack the aces of her opponent, sending her to the rail.
"Whenever I have eights against aces like that," Freitas told her table, "I always sing that song. You know - 'Do you want to build a snowman?' and I always get an eight."
Meanwhile at her table, Bea Berman sits with around 125,000 chips next to Spanish bracelet winner Leo Margets.