He raises to 200,000 and John Duthie makes the call.
The flop shows up . Duthie checks, and Wolpert continues out with 290,000 more chips. After once again counting his stack down, Duthie cuts out the calling chips and slides them into the pot.
The turn card is the . Duthie passes again, and Wolpert checks behind.
Fifth street is the . Duthie takes the betting lead now, firing out a bet of 500,000 in a trail of pink chips. That's enough to get Wolpert out of the hand and send a nice pot to Duthie without showdown.
He puts out 200,000 again, the new standard for this blind level apparently. Duthie caps his cards with a pink chip before cutting out what looks like a reraise. Indeed, he lands on 750,000 as his number and stacks them out into the pot. Wolpert asks how much the raise is before letting his hand go.
Duthie has won the first three hands since returning from break.
He makes it 200,000 again. Duthie stares at his cards, then shifts his glance up to his opponent, looking like he's considering something serious. After giving it a good long think-over, he lays his hand down.