Alex Rocha made broadway on fifth street but was up against trip deuces. Matheus Mendes held the deuces and, by sixth street, he had a full house, sending Rocha to the rail.
Matt Glantz raised from middle position and got action from Mikhail Savinov on the button and big blind Stephen Chidwick. On the flop, Glantz bet and got two calls. On the turn, only Savinov called Glantz's bet, and Glantz fired the last bet on the river.
Savinov called and Glantz brought forth for a straight, but Savinov had for kings full of aces.
Bernardo Dias had already survived one all-in with a chop and soon found himself hoping to do so again as he was going to sixth street with a draw to an eight low against the aces of Viatcheslav Ortynskiy. Dias got there, making an eight-seven, but Ortynskiy still had outs to the river on the low side with . He picked up a , making an eight-five.
With , Dias needed to improve, but he turned over a and went bust.
In the midst of discussing a bet between Matt Glantz and Justin Bonomo, Shaun Deeb was playing a hand of Omaha against Jake Schwartz.
The board ran out and each player had several bets in front of them. Deeb bet the river and Schwartz called.
"Did you make the nut flush?" Deeb asked.
This prompted Schwartz to show his hand, but Schwartz's hand was quickly overlooked as Deeb flipped over two queens for four of a kind. Deeb had and won the entire pot with four queens.
"You really wanted to see my hand," Deeb said, "which is good, 'cause I really wanted to show you my hand."
As for the bet between Bonomo and Glantz, Deeb was pretty convinced it was a sure thing. Glantz mentioned he was so confident that he would have bet almost any amount. Bonomo laughed it off, saying it was a fun bet. We can't report on the details of the bet at this time, but once it is resolved, hopefully we can bring you the result.
Justin Bonomo and Ashton Griffin saw an flop and both players saw fit to put a few bets in to get Griffin's last 5,000 or so in the middle.
Bonomo:
Griffin:
Bonomo had aces up, but Griffin had the nut low and turned better aces up when the hit. The river didn't do Bonomo any good, as Griffin had a live deuce and a scoop.
Matthew Smith raised from the cutoff and Brandon Shack-Harris and Jameson Painter called from the blinds.
The flop came and the action checked to Smith who bet. Both Shack-Harris and Painter called.
The turn was the and again Smith was first to bet. Shack-Harris called and Painter folded.
The river was the and Shack-Harris bet.
Smith looked little annoyed at the river card and started grinding his chips together. He took about 20 seconds to call and was happy to get half the pot when Shack-Harris showed for the nut flush. Smith showed for a low and the two chopped a little bit of Painter's chips.
Sirisakorn had the betting lead on fifth street. He check-called a bet from Lisandro. On sixth he bet and Lisandro called. On seventh he bet again. Lisandro called and Sirisakorn showed him a full house revealing a among his hole cards. Lisandro scooped up his hand and tossed it to the muck.