David Peters was down to less than 10 big blinds and shoved all in for 56,000 in middle position. Dimitar Danchev was in the big blind and last to act and called.
David Peters:
Dimitar Danchev:
It was a coin flip that would see Peters jump out to a big lead when the flop came . The on the turn secured the double up for Peters and the on the river was just a formality.
Chance Kornuth opened to 13,000 in early position and was called by Jared Jaffee on his left and Brian Rast in the big blind.
The flop fell and Rast checked to Kornuth who continued with a bet of 16,000. Jaffee called only to have Rast stick in a check-raise to 70,000. Kornuth thought for a minute before finally folding and Jaffee quickly did the same.
It only took a couple of raises before George Wolff and Scott Eskenazi got all of their chips in the middle preflop. Wolff was the player at risk with just shy of 150,000.
George Wolff:
Scott Eskenazi:
Wolff needed some help in order to stay alive but the flop of was not going to cut it. The on the turn brought some chop outs but the on the river locked up the entire pot for Eskenazi.
Chris Hunichen was facing an all-in from Jake Schindler on the river on a board of . Schindler had him covered and there was already over 150,000 in the pot.
Hunichen eventually called and Schindler showed the winner with for an over-pair. Hunichen showed and was eliminated.
The flop read . David Peters bet 23,000, Mustapha Kanit called.
The turn was the . Kanit checked, Peters bet 35,000 and Kanit jammed all in for 112,500. Peters took a few moments but called fairly quickly and saw the bad news as his was well behind the flopped set of Kanit.
The river came the and Kanit secured the big double up.
George Wolff just recently lost a large portion of his chips to Seth Davies but that didn't slow him down from getting in on the action. He raised in early position and picked up calls from Clayton Kalisek on the button and Brian Altman in the big blind. The flop came and the action checked around to the on the turn.
Wolff was first to fire in a bet of 25,000 and Kalisek called while Altman got out of the way. The river was the and Wolff check-called a bet of 30,000 from Kalisek. Kalisek showed for a missed straight draw and Wolff tabled for two pair.
At the table next door, Justin Saliba ran a triple-barrel bluff on a board of . Saliba turned over which was no good after Ankush Mandavia called all three streets with for Broadway.