| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
240,000
30,000
|
30,000 |
|
|
235,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
|
|
210,000
28,000
|
28,000 |
|
|
195,000
7,500
|
7,500 |
|
|
180,000
18,000
|
18,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
165,000
66,000
|
66,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
155,000
42,000
|
42,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
115,000
35,000
|
35,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
105,000
15,000
|
15,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
75,000
1,000
|
1,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
60,000
11,000
|
11,000 |
|
|
35,000
13,000
|
13,000 |
|
|
||
World Series of Poker Europe 2010
Under the gun, Ilan Rouah opened to 6,300, and David Peters called from the small blind. Last to act was Chris Moorman, and he squeezed in an all-in shove over the top from the big blind. Rouah and Peters quickly ducked out of the way, and Moorman was able to add nearly 15,000 chips to his stack.
On the next hand, it was John Tabatabai opening the pot to 6,000 straight from the under-the-gun dot. Peters was in there again, only this time he was the one doing the re-raising. From the button, he three-bet to 16,200, but Moorman was still lying in wait with yet another re-raise up his sleeve. From the small blind this time, Moorman squeezed all in again, about 85,000 total this time. Tabatabai gave him a good long stare before letting his cards go, and Peters apparently had an easier decision as he quickly folded as well.
Without even seeing a flop, Moorman has bostered his stack by 40,800 chips. He's back over the 100,000 mark now, having fully recovered from nearly three levels of being blinded out.
Manig Loeser raised to 5,500 from UTG+1 and Praz Bansi made it 14,700 from the big blind. Loaser quickly announced all-in and Bansi let it go. As a result, Bansi drops to 64,000 with 12 players still in tact.
Table 2
Seat 1: John Tabatabai
Seat 2: Chris Bjorin
Seat 3: David Peters
Seat 4: Chris Moorman
Seat 5: Ilan Rouah
Seat 6: Willie Tann
Table 4
Seat 1: Phil Laak
Seat 2: Lawrie Inman
Seat 3: Vincent Dalet
Seat 4: Praz Bansi
Seat 5: Andrew Pantling
Seat 6: Manig Loeser
We can't see the Wood for the tree-sized stacks of Lawrie Inman. Peter Wood pushed all-in over the top of Inman's raise, the latter calling with
, dominating Wood's
before and after the
board. We're down to just 12 players and another redraw.
A battle of the blinds led to a 

flop between Vincent Dalet (small) and Chris Bjorin (big). With Dalet leading out for 9,100, Bjorin relinquished his folded arms to bump it up to 34,100.
Dalet was having none of it, though, and although he toppled some chips off the top of his column as he rearranged his stack, he maintained his composure to slide a three-bet to 77,400 across the felt.
Bjorin, having returned to his usual posture, gave a quick face-shrug (that's about as much emotion as you'll get from this poker face) before making the fold.
As soon as he did, Dalet released a sigh of relief that could have blown a boat across the ocean before showing his cards to the crowd, and proudly dropping a 
onto the felt. He now has 202,500.
Ilan Rouah opened to 5,800 under the gun, and Phil Laak called in the next seat over. From the small blind, short stack Daniel Colman moved all in on a squeeze. The call from Rouah came as quickly as the period at the end of Colman's "All in," announcement, and Laak was shocked to see the insta-call.
"I was going to do that. But now, I don't know if I wanna. Wait a minute, why can't I call here? Why can't I call?" After just another moment, he answered his own question, "I can't call," and pushed his cards into the muck. "Please show me you can beat me," he pleaded with neither player in particular.
Colman showed his
first and then Rouah rolled over his
. "I had that beat. And I had that beat. I'm the worst." Laak told his table that he folded pocket eights, and it would have been the winner in the end. The board ran
, no help for the at-risk Colman. He's out in 14th place, but Phil Laak seems unconcerned.
"Did that really just happen?" he asked. "You're a sick puppy!" he leaned back and yelled at Rouah. Laak had to run over to tell John Tabatabai what just happened, and then he returned to his chair, remarkably quieter than he had been a few minutes ago. A sulking Laak will have to be content with about 90,000 chips, while Rouah has moved his stack back to around 250,000.
Chris Moorman (cut-off) and Peter Wood (button) got it all in preflop with the latter a gnat's nostril hair in front with 
versus 
.
If Wood was relieved to be flipping, he won't have liked the flop as the dealer lay a this-ain't-gonna-be-easy 

onto the felt.
"Another one of those will do," willed Wood as the turn came a perfect
, but his pleas fell on death ears as the river came the
to double Moorman through with a flush.
Wood made a noise that sounded like something from the Exorcist, but was a gent in defeat, swiftly passing over the 39,400 in chips and proceeding with the next hand.
Ilan Rouah opened to 5,500 from the button and Phil Laak reraised to 43,400 leaving himself just 7,000 behind. Rouah decided to call and the rest of the chips went in on a
flop with Laak's
still ahead of Rouah's
. The
increased the chances for Laak and the
was unneccesary if not welcome.
Laak is back over the 100,000 mark but Rouah still has over 200,000.
Nathan Lee opened the pot the only way he could really -- with an all-in shove for his last 25,500 chips. Chris Bjorin squeezed out
two seats over, and he made the call to put Lee at risk. Lee knew the news wasn't going to be good, and he sheepishly tabled his
, needing to improve to stay alive.
He would find no help from the dealer, though. The board rolled out
, and Lee's hopes for a WSOPE bracelet have been cut down with 14 players left. He'll take home about three times his buy-in, not a bad reward for riding the short stack for the past two days.