James Schafer raised to 3,600 in mid-position and Melanie Weisner three-bet to 10,000 on the button. Next to act was Fernando Gomez in the small blind and he moved all-in for 44,300. Schafer took quite a while to make his decision.
"I don't know what to do?" Said Schafer before eventually folding.
"Now, I am in a pickle," said Weisner, "will you show if I fold" She asked.
"Yes," replied Gomez.
"Oh no! That means I should call," said Weisner before burying her head in her hands, "you wouldn't bluff in this spot. Never!" Said Weisner before folding.
Gomez showed
and Weisner and Schafer were obviously both content with their decision
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
55,000
24,000
|
24,000 |



. Chris Moorman fired 18,800 into his opponent Patrik Antonius. Antonius thought for a little bit and then raised to 46,000. Moorman went into the tank for quite some time. These two players do have a bit of a history together as they spent a lot of time playing together at the
. Antonius didn't show and raked in the pot.
, and Corkins called a continuation bet. On the
turn, Palevic tried again with another 20,900. Corkins flatted once again, and the
paired the board on the river. Palevic stacked together a bet of about 27,000, then gazed up at the pot and paused. He reached back into his stack and made his tower of chips 55,400 tall, then glanced up at Corkins. Palevic put his hand behind the would-be bet, pump faked... and then checked. Corkins checked it right back, and Palevic led out a loud, "Uhhhhhhh!" He instantly slid his cards into the muck.
to win the pot. The two men are essentially even now with about 400,000 chips apiece.
.