Gary Hansen was in middle position and raised to 7,500. Galen Hall was in the small blind and called, as did the big blind.
The flop was and Hansen bet 8,500. Hall called and the big blind folded.
The turn was the and Hall check-called Hansen's bet of 12,000.
The river was the and Hansen verbalised all in out of turn. Hall then said, "Ok, I'll check." Hansen then said, "I'm still all in." Which was for about 70,000. Hall went into the tank with 51,000 remaining, saying out loud, "How do I fold this?" After deliberating for a couple of minutes, Hall folded, showing his opponent . Hansen then tabled his hand which was pocket sevens for a rivered set and began to collect his chips.
"Now I have the big stacks here," Marvin Karlins joked after having just busted Phillip Rhodes when his held up against the of Rhodes. Karlins wasn't referring to himself as the chip leader, but he instead faces Jonathan Abdellatif from one seat over and Ernest Smith, who he shared a table with before already.
With about 25,000 in the pot and the board reading , Alex Maturi was in the small blind and heads up against Everett Carlton in the big blind. Both players got it in on the flop with Maturi covering Carlton's stack of 123,500 by 2,000.
Maturi tabled for a set of two's and Carlton showed for a flush draw.
The board bricked off with the and , sending the pot to Maturi and eliminating Carlton.
Four different tournaments kicked off in Brasilia today and Event #29: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em took the lion's share of the tables at noon when Day 2 kicked off. Since, an entire section broke and the remaining field of less than 120 players is all in the same section.
At almost the same time and on neighboring tables, Matthew McEwan and Nate Bandy locked up doubles to stay in contention.
Bandy got there for his last 35,000 with against the of Justin Liberto after spiking a nine on the flop of a board .
McEwan got into a raising war with table neighbor Daniel Wagner and the latter flipped over . McEwan had a coin flip with and the board came to give McEwan a full house.
Pete Chen raised from early position and found one caller in Mike Vanier in the big blind, who called and checked the flop. Chen bet 14,000 and was called before Vanier check-called another bet worth 25,000 after the turn.
The river paired the board and Vanier checked the third street in a row. Chen moved all in for 112,000 and Vanier had less than that behind, elected to fold.
Eddy Sabat got it all in preflop against Raymond Ho and Terry Fan. Sabat held and his opponents had pocket sixes and pocket jacks, respectively. Sabat had both well covered with over 200,000 at the time, Fan had roughly 68,000 and Ho roughly 32,000.
The board ran out and Sabat added a nice pot to his stack.