Shaun Deeb opened to 4,000 in middle position and Paulina Loeliger shoved for 9,000 in the hijack. The cutoff called and Deeb called.
The dealer spread the flop and Deeb bet 10,000, causing the cutoff to fold.
Paulina Loeliger:
Shaun Deeb:
The dealer ran out the turn and river, but had forgotten to flip over Loeliger's hand. Loeliger sat still for a bit of time before suddenly putting her cards into the middle of the muck and moving the pile of cards around, leaving her hole cards unknown.
Deeb added the chips to his stack and Loeliger made her exit from the tournament area.
Joe McKeehen in the small blind was in a heads-up pot against the big blind.
The flop came and McKeehen fired a bet of 2,000, which his opponent called. McKeehen sized up to 8,000 on the turn, which got his opponent to lay it down.
Joe McKeehen was out of position in a heads-up pot and checked on the flop of . The opponent bet 8,000 and McKeehen called.
McKeehen checked again on the turn and his opponent checked back. On the river, McKeehen led out with a massive bet of 42,000 into the pot of around 25,000.
The opponent thought for a minute and folded, revealing the in his hand as he did so. McKeehen, meanwhile, showed the in his hand.
The third and final starting flight of the 2nd annual $10,000 buy-in, $10 million GTD Wynn Millions Main Event as part of 2022 Wynn Millions at Wynn Las Vegas wrapped up late Saturday evening with defending champion Andrew Moreno looking for another title after bagging a stack of 315,000.
Day 1c of the $10,000 buy-in Main Event saw the by far the biggest starting flight field a field of 544 players. In total, the three starting flights attracted a total of 1,075 players to generate $10,105,000 in prize money, squeaking past the guarantee of $10 million.
The lion's share of the prize pool, $1,655,952, will go to the eventual champion of the remaining 315 players, who will also take home the glamorous Main Event trophy.
Moreno, who took down to 2021 Main Event for a cool $1,460,106, found a bag on Day 1c in a big way after busting late in Day 1b. He will return for Day 2ab as he looks to earn his second seventh-figure score.
Big stacks at the end of Day 1c include popular poker commentator Nick Schulman (400,000) and Ugur Secilmis (406,000), who a few months ago finished fifth in the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event for $1,800,000, as well as Michael Liang (352,000), Chance Kornuth (286,000) and Shaun Deeb (271,000).
Other players who found a bag on Day 1c were Xuan Liu, Joe McKeehen, Matt Berkey, Jake Daniels and Eli Elezra.
Players who were in the field on Day 1c but didn't make it to bagging time include Chris Moorman, Seth Davies, Patrik Antonius, Nadya Magnus,Ari Engel and Bill Klein.
The players who survived Day 1c will return at noon local time on March 7 to battle it out on the felt in Day 2c. Before that, action will pick up on March 6 at noon with Day 2ab for a battle between players from the first two flights. Both Day 2s will consist of five 90-minute levels, a change from the ten 60-minute levels that have made up the Day 1 structure.
Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team will be back tomorrow covering the Day 2ab action.