Angela Jordison raised to 40,000 from the cutoff with beofre Ali Imsirovic three-bet to 100,000 from the button with . Abdullah Alshanti jammed for 455,000 from the big blind. Imsirovic called.
The sevens were still good on the flop and even better on the turn. The completed the board and Alshanti found himself with nearly one million chips.
There was a raise to 40,000 from early position and Jack Allen three-bet to 140,000 in the cutoff. The action folded back to the initial raiser who shipped all in. Allen instantly called off his stack of 825,000 and the cards were tabled.
Jack Allen:
Opponent:
The flop came and Allen looked poised for a double up. The turn was the and the river was the as Allen earned a late-night double up.
On the board with a little less than 200,000 in the pot, Cedrric Trevino checked over to his opponent in the cutoff, who overbet the pot for 250,000 after about 90 seconds of deliberation.
Trevino, in the big blind, thought about his decision for about a minute before making the call with for second pair.
His opponent shrugged and said "Nice hand", showing . Trevino is now at exactly 2,000,000.
On the PokerGO stream, action picked up on the board with Zilong Zhang checking in the cutoff with . Dan Smith, with the , bet 215,000 from the button. Zhang then put his stack to use and raised to 675,000, Smith called.
The river put a four to a straight on the board and Zhang fired for 780,000. Smith went into the tank but opted to fold and awarded the pot to Zhang.
Alex Kulev opened to 40,000 from early position and Dan Colpoys three-bet to 125,000 in middle position. Action folded back to Kulev who called.
The dealer fanned the flop and Kulev check-called for 75,000. Both players checked the turn to the river and Kulev bet 425,000.
"Not the best runout for this hand," noted Colpoys as he mucked his face-up. Kulev took the pot to add to his stack while Colpoys retained the chip lead even after folding his cowboys.
A player under the gun opened to 40,000 and Jeremy Wien three-bet to 130,000 from the button. The original raiser called.
The flop came and Wien continued for 105,000. The under-the-gun player called.
On the turn, Wien bet once again, this time for 180,000. His opponent called a second time.
The river brought the and after his opponent checked, Wien bet for 260,000, leaving 500,000 behind. His opponent, who had Wien covered, deliberated for a few seconds before announcing all in.
Wien stood up immediately and muttered "This is so sick" and questioned whether or not his opponent had the same hand or queen-jack of diamonds.
Finally, after a few minutes and apologizing to the table for taking his time, Wien announced "If this is the way I go out, then this is the way I go out" and made the call, turning over .
His opponent tapped the table and said "Nice call", showing to double Wien up.
Action panned to the outer table with Andrew Barfield betting 75,000 on the board from the big blind. Daniel Rezaei, with , then jammed for 1,190,000 from the hijack.
Barfield had his opponent covered and called as the covering stack with his , which was good for a flopped set.
Mitchell Halverson raised it up from under the gun and was flat-called by the player on his left. Ranganath Kanchi also called from the small blind and Rafael Moraes shoved all in for 590,000 in the big blind. Halverson stuck in the last of his chips for around 400,000, the player on his left also called having everyone covered, and Kanchi put in the last of his 205,000 chips as well. A crowd gathered as the players rose to their feet for this four-way all in.
Ranganath Kanchi:
Mitchell Halverson:
Rafael Moraes:
Opponent:
The flop came as Moraes flopped a set of kings to take a huge lead. The turn was the as now three players made a set. The river happened to be the and Kanchi emerged as the winner with the only straight.
"What a stupid f***ing hand," one player noted as the rest of the table laughed.
In a bloated pot with over 1,200,000 in the middle on a completed board, Timur Margolin had bet 420,000 on the button. Taylor von Kriegenbergh thought for some time in the middle position before the clock was called, and he ultimately put in the chips.
Margolin turned over , causing Von Kriegenbergh to toss his cards up in the air and into the muck as he took a hit to his big stack. Margolin was up to approximately 2,800,000 at the conclusion of the hand, but lost a sizable pot shortly after to move to just under 2,000,000.