Mike Adamo moved all in before the flop for 268,000 chips from the small blind after Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden had raised. Lodden quickly called and the showdown went as following.
Sebastian Trisch raised from the button and Anthony Ghamrawi three-bet from the small blind to 117,000. The big blind folded and Trisch moved all in for about 500,000 and his opponent called right away.
Trisch:
Ghamrawi:
The board ran out and Trisch was knocked out in 21st place.
Jude Ainsworth opened under the gun to 50,000 with 408,000 behind. [Removed:40] from Italy was seated right behind him and made a big three bet to 200,000 even. All other player quickly folded and action was back on Ainsworth.
The Irish player thought for quite some time. He appeared not to be happy with the three bet behind him, but wasn't ready to just fold his hand. He shoved all in after some pondering and his neighbor instantly called. "You have ace-king?" Ainsworth asked with a hopeful voice. Vitagliano didn't say a thing but let his cards do the talking. And it wasn't ace-king:
[Removed:40]:
Jude Ainsworth:
Ainsworth needed to improve but would fail on that mission. The board would show just show blanks and Ainsworth had to leave the table. "Good game" some players said. "Good luck" he replied with a calm voice.
Dan Murariu and Stephen Chidwick had tangled many times before, and this time it turned out the be the last as the latter was knocked out.
Chidwick moved all in before the flop for 310,000 and Murariu called and the other players folded.
Chidwick:
Murariu:
The board ran out and Chidwick, who was one of the most successful players still in the hunt, hit the rail. Murariu is now among the biggest stacks with 21 players remaining.
Frei Dilling raised to 53,000 on the second hand after the break and [Removed:40] moved all in for 391,000. The action folded back to Dilling and he made the call.
First off we saw Timo Pfutzenreuter raise the hijack to 40,000 and Simeon Naydenov called in the cut off position. Frei Dilling made it 150,000 to go from the small blind and Pfutzenreuter folded. Naydenov made the call and they saw a flop.
Dilling bet 135,000 and Naydenov made the call. Dilling bet out 255,000 on the turn and again Naydenov made the call. The river was the and now Dilling bet a firm 750,000. Naydenov thought about it for a little bit, and then folded his face up.
With just a couple of seconds on the clock there was one more hand to be played before the break would start. That hand would take about ten minutes so instead of a 20 minute break, some had just 10 minutes of free time.
We picked up the action again on the flop. There were three players involved but Frei Dilling was the only one calling the 60,000 bet Timo Pfutzenreuter made. The turn was the and this time around Pfutzenreuter bet 110,000. Dilling again called.
The river was the and Pfutzenreuter bet out 333,000. Dilling thought about it for a good four minutes before eventually (reluctantly) folding his face up.
Pablo Gordillo still has the big stack at EPT Vienna, but even his countrymen Adrian Mateos Diaz and Sergio Aido don't know who he is. But while Gordillo tries to pip those two to become the first Spanish EPT champ, the well-known duo aim for High Roller glory instead.
Kristy Arnett is in Austria for EPT Vienna, where she is joined by 2013 World Series of Poker bracelet winner Chad Holloway and PokerNews live reporter Remko Rinkema. The trio breaks down all of the latest news, and then Remko chats with Gus Hansen about Vienna and getting back to his winning ways.