Yan Chen raised to 12,000, and Nick Binger called in the cutoff. Each player exchanged one card. Chen peaked at his and checked. Binger bet 16,000, and Chen called with an . Binger nodded and mucked his cards.
2010 World Series of Poker
Mike Wattel opened to 13,000 from middle position and Todd Bui called out of the small blind.
Wattel stood pat as Bui drew one and fired out with a bet of 25,000. Wattel quickly made the call by splashing the pot with five 5,000-denomination chips.
"Ten-six!" stated Bui only to have Wattel table his {9x] to rake in the pot and climb to 265,000.
"Wrong four-sider" added Bui as he slipped to 75,000 in chips.
James Bord open-shoved from the cutoff. Alex Kravchenko quickly folded his button, and Mike Wattel gave up his small blind. Not so fast for big blind Yan Chen. He asked for a count and learned it would be 106,500 for him to call. Chen considered it for three minutes before deciding to fold.
In his second consecutive pot of opening to 15,000, Nick Binger didn't pick up the blinds and antes but rather was met with a 107,000-chip re-raise from Mike Wattel in the big blind.
Taking a few moments to deliberate, Binger made the call and drew one to his .
Wattel stood pat on his for his tournament life.
Unfortunately for Binger he drew the to slip to 180,000 as Wattel raked in the double up to send him to 215,000 in chips.
Alexander Kravchenko may be short stacked at the moment, but he still deserves the respect of his teammates for earning a seat at the table. Kravchenko, a member of Team Russia, is the first Team PokerStars Pro to make a final table at the 2010 WSOP.
Yan Chen opened to 12,000 from middle position, and with the action on Todd Bui in the small blind he asked, "how much you got?"
However this wasn't in the direction of Chen, but instead James Bord in the big blind.
Bord indicated to the dealer to count his chips, and after the amount of 118,500 was cut down, Bui folded, as did Bord, to see Chen take down the pot.
Alexander Kravchenko raised to 15,000 from early position, and it folded around to Todd Bui in the big blind. The short stack pondered for a moment before announcing all in. Kravchenko had to call 46,000 more, and he paid the price for a chance to get the first knockout at the table. Bui drew one, and Kravchenko traded in a face up. Bui was drawing to a .
"Ooh, I have a little better draw," he said when he saw Kravchenko's . "Oh I made it!" Bui said quickly and turned over a . Kravchenko was drawing dead, and after flipping over a , he paid off Bui to double him to 135,000. Kravchenko took over Bui's roll as the table short stack with 48,000.
A waitress has appeared out of the desert with a tray full of waters and Red Bulls. Dehydration disaster averted.
Derric Haynie opened to 11,000 from under the gun and Nick Binger made the call next to act before Yan Chen bumped it to 42,000 from the big blind.
Haynie quickly folded but Binger took a little longer as he deliberated with a decision while glaring at Chen.
Binger eventually opted to fold as Chen took down the pot to move to 255,000 in chips.
With the action folding round to James Bord in the small blind, he pushed all in to force a fold from Alexander Kravchenko.
The following hand Bord tried it again from the button and was again successful.
Bord has now pushed over the 100,000-chip mark.