Antoine Saout raised to 455,000 from middle position, and Dan Ott called from the hijack.
The flop fell . Saout continued for 630,000, and Ott called. The fell on the turn. Saout bet 1,380,000, Ott called, and the river completed the board. Saout checked, and after a few moments, Ott checked behind.
Ott showed for tens and treys, but Saout tabled for jacks and treys to win the pot.
Justas Vaiciulionis opened under the gun with a raise to 1,650,000. He had just 305,000 behind. Richard Gryko called from the cutoff, and the remaining players folded.
On the flop, Vaiciulionis moved all in for the rest, and Gryko called.
Vaiciulionis:
Gryko:
Gryko's ace-high was in the lead. Vaiciulionis was looking for a king or a queen. The turn provided Vaiciulionis flush outs, but the river couldn't save him.
Vaiciulionis became the 30th-place finisher in the Main Event, taking home $214,913 for his efforts.
Alexandre Reard limped from the cutoff, and Benjamin Pollak raised to 680,000 on the button. Once the action was back on Reard, he moved all in for less than 20 big blinds, and Pollak quickly called.
Alexandre Reard:
Benjamin Pollak:
Reard was in need of help, and his rail was asking for a six. They got not only one of them but two on the flop. The double-up was confirmed with the turn, making the river a formality.
Reard's double was for 3,875,000, and Pollak took yet another hit to his stack.
Florian Lohnert raised to 450,000 from the cutoff, Ben Lamb called on the button, and Michael Ruane called from the big blind.
The flop came down . Ruane checked, and Lohnert bet 900,000. Lamb raised to 2,100,000, Ruane folded, and Lohnert tanked for about two minutes before he folded, surrendering another pot to Lamb.
Marcel Luske managed to get his stack of 2,050,000 into the middle preflop and got action from Jake Bazeley. The two players have been exchanging words all day, so it was only fitting they would find themselves flipping at some point.
Luske was at risk with , up against Bazeley's .
The flop came , and Luske remained ahead with a pair of tens. Bazeley's rail started calling for a king, but the hit the turn.
Another railbird yelled, "C'mon! Barry Greenstein on the river!"
The river was the , though, and Luske held on to double up.
Ben Lamb raised to 435,000 from middle position, John Hesp called from the hijack, and Antoine Saout called from the button. Dan Ott three-bet to 1,825,000 from the small blind. Lamb ducked out of the way, Hesp followed suit, and Saout folded, as well.
Alexandre Reard opened to 450,000 under the gun and called a three-bet to 1,150,000 from Valentin Messina, who was in the cutoff. Reard check-called 1,050,000 on the flop. The turn brought the and another barrel of 1,875,000 from Messina. Reard tanked awhile but let his hand go.
Marcel Luske managed to get his stack of 2,050,000 into the middle preflop, and he got action from Jake Bazeley. The two players have been exchanging words all day, so it was only fitting they would find themselves flipping at some point.
Luske was at risk with , up against Bazeley's .
The flop came , and Luske remained ahead with a pair of nines. Bazeley's rail started calling for a king, but the hit the turn.
Another railbird yelled, "C'mon! Barry Greenstein on the river!"
The river was the , though, and Luske held on to double up.
Dan Ott raised to 450,000 from the cutoff, Neil Patel three-bet shoved from the button for 3,070,000, and Ott called after confirming the amount.
Ott:
Patel:
Patel was ahead, but the flop came down to give Ott the lead with a pair of nines. The turn was no help to Patel, nor was the river, ending his Main Event in 29th place.
Action folded around to Pedro Oliveira. He limped in from the small blind.
"Let's play beer poker!" he said, raising his cup and taking a sip.
"I hope you're ready to cheers before the flop," Bryan Piccioli said from the big blind. The two man tapped their glasses and took a sip, then Piccioli checked, taking the two to a flop.
On the flop, Oliveira bet 200,000. Piccioli and Oliveira tapped glasses, drank again, and Piccioli called.
Both players checked on the turn to the river. There, Oliveira bet 350,000.
Piccioli quickly folded, turning his face-up. "I had a really good hand on the flop," he said.
As the dealer saw what transpired, he warned Piccioli not to expose his cards without announcing his action, letting him know that he could receive a penalty.