A player opened and Krista Lowery three-bet to 3,700 in the hijack. It folded back to the initial player who called.
The flop revealed ad they both checked to see a on the turn. After another check from her opponent, Lowery bet 3,100 and it was enough to make him fold and grab the pot.
After a player in early position opened to 1,400, Daniel Negreanu went all in for his final 1,000 chips. The cutoff, button, small blind, and Dennis Wilke from the big blind all came along.
The flop came and everybody checked.
The arrived on the turn and the Wilke put out a bet of 2,300. It folded to the button, who called. The small blind folded.
On the river, Wilke fired for 11,000. The button contemplated for nearly a minute but folded.
Wilke announced that he gave Negreanu a chance and turned over for a pair of fours. However, Negreanu turned over and exclaimed for the table and his vlog "That's why you never play ace-king!"
Wilke scooped the pot and went over 100,000 while Negreanu hit the rail.
Daniel Negreanu has had a disappointing 2022 World Series of Poker, and that didn't change on Day 1c of the Main Event, but he did receive a good luck charm from one player on the rail, so there's that.
A wholesome moment took place Tuesday evening inside Bally's when Arash Shahi, a fellow Canadian from Toronto, approached the GGPoker ambassador who was seated at his table during the $10,000 buy-in world championship event.
Players are now on their final 20-minute break of the day. Blinds will be 300/600/600 when play continues.
The action is in full force with chip stacks climbing around the room. Ryan Feldman is reaching chip lead potential, Chess Grand Master Magnus Carlsen hits the rail, and Jesse Sylvia continues to dominate the field.
GGPoker has informed PokerNews that the online poker giant is launching a Poker Integrity Council (PIC) to help put a stop to rampant cheating within the game.
The council includes five well-respected members, and not all are connected to GGPoker. Jason Koon and Fedor Holz (GGPoker), Andrew "LuckyChewy" Lichtenberger (LearnWPT), Seth Davies (Run it Once), and Nick Petrangelo (Upswing Poker) have been selected to help fix one of poker's biggest problems — cheating.