Robert James raised from early position to 62,000. Moses Alosh sat to his direct left and moved all in for 413,000. Action back on James, he tanked for some time before finally making the call.
Moses Alosh: 6♣6♠
Robert James: A♦K♠
The board ran out 9♥10♥10♣8♥K♦. A rivered king marked the end of Alosh's deep run and sent him to the rail in 6th place.
Ryan Laplante limped in from middle position and Thai Ha did the same from the cutoff. Chip leader David Prociak raised to 130,000 from the button and received a call from both opponents.
Action folded around to Prociak. who fired a continuation bet of 200,000 on the J♣7♥6♥ flop. Laplante got out of the way while Ha made the call.
Prociak fired a second barrel when checked to on the K♥ turn, this time for 450,000 which was enough to force a fold from Ha.
Thai Ha raised in early position to 60,000, Robert James in the cutoff called and Ryan Laplante shoved all in from the button for 3,440,000. Ha remained in the tank for some time but eventually made the call. James snap-folded and the hand went to a showdown.
Ryan Laplante: 10♣10♦
Thai Ha: A♦Q♣
The board ran out 6♥8♣7♥Q♥8♥. Ha turned top pair to pull out in front of Laplante's pocket tens and sent him to the rail by the river.
For many part-time players, the World Series of Poker (WSOP) is a chance to get away from work and spend some time in Las Vegas playing poker and chasing a bracelet.
One of those part-time bracelet hopefuls is venture capitalist and longtime poker player Chamath Palihapitiya, an early Facebook executive and the founder and CEO of the investment firm Social Capital. After more than a decade off of the WSOP felt, the billionaire returned to the World Series to take his shot at winning a bracelet in Event #29: $100,000 High Roller.
PokerNews caught up with Palihapitiya earlier in the series as he battled in a Day 1 field that included Chance Kornuth, Alex Foxen, Chris Brewer plenty more of the world's top high-roller players.
Robert James opened to 60,000 from the cutoff and Wai Kiat Lee made the call from the button.
The flop came 10♦9♥7♥. James checked, Lee bet 95,000 and James moved all in with a covering stack. Lee quickly made the call and was at risk.
Wai Kiat Lee: 9♣9♦
Robert James: J♥J♠
James' overpair was far behind Lee's flopped set but he still had outs in the form of a jack or an eight. He did not get what he needed on the Q♣ turn or 10♠ river and Lee collected a full double up.
David Prociak limped in from the cutoff and Robert James raised it to 80,000 from the button. James moved all in for about 700,000 total and Prociak made the call.
Robert James: Q♣J♣
David Prociak: A♥A♦
James was in bad shape against Prociak's aces but found some outs when he flopped top pair on the J♥7♥8♦ flop. He pulled ahead on the Q♦ turn but the A♣ river gave Prociak a set, sending James to the rail and extending his lead over the remaining two players in the process.
David Prociak in the cutoff moved all in covering Wai Kiat Lee on the button. Lee called off the bet for approximately 700,000 and his tournament life was on the line.
Wai Kiat Lee: A♥J♣
David Prociak: A♦K♣
The board ran out Q♣K♦7♥6♥6♣. Prociak's dominating hand stayed that way to the river and Lee was eliminated in 3rd place.