It was earlier reported that George Danzer was an early casualty. Well, after brushing the dust off my Miss Marple hat, I did some detective work and found out that he departed with versus ,four-betting all in after his opponent had three-bet his open of 800 to 2,200.
"He was an aggressive player, so I thought he'd fold a lot of hands," claimed Danzer in the witness box. "I was actually quite pleased when he turned over his hand."
Sadly for the German, he wasn't so pleased by the board...
Chalk up on elimination for Bryn Kenney. He opened for 1,200 from under the gun and was called by the button player. on a flop of , Kenny bet 1,400. The button raised the minimum to 2,800, then called Kenney's three-bet to 5,800. Kenney bet 3,000 on the turn and then put his opponent all in for 2,550 when the river came . That player called with top pair, , which was no good against Kenney's flopped straight, .
With the board reading , Humberto Brenes bet 8,000 into a pot of about 20,000 only to be called by a player on the button. Brenes showed , which had just about got there on the end against a disgruntled .
As a result, Brenes is now up to 78,000, although we're yet to witness any crazy antics or witness the infamous sharks swim across the felt. There's still time, though...
Former PokerNews employee Anthony Yeh started the day with 55,000 chips but is down to 38,000 after losing two hands in rapid succession. Yeh opened the first hand pre-flop to 1,050 and was called in four spots. He continued for 2,400 on a nine-high flop, . Two players called to the turn, a card that everyone checked. Everyone also checked when the board paired on the river, . Yeh's unimproved wasn't enough to win the pot when one opponent showed down .
A few hands later Yeh called an 1,100-chip pre-flop raise sitting with the button. He called another 1,400 when his opponent continued on a flop of . That call seemed to concern Yeh's opponent; he checked and called a bet of 2,400 from yeh on the turn. The river paired and again Yeh's opponent checked. Yeh bet 6,000, drawing a pained look and a "Wow," from his opponent. That player finally called with , kings and treys. It was the winner.
A player raised to 1,025 from under the gun before Jon Friedberg reraised to 2,600 from middle position. Brian Haveson called from the big blind after verifying the amount of the three-bet and then the original raiser folded claiming, "This isn't going to end well for me."
Haveson and Friedberg took a flop of . Haveson led out with a bet of 4,500. Friedberg made the call.
Another lady lurked down fourth street and she was all dressed in diamonds as the dealer put the on the turn. Haveson checked as did Friedberg right behind him.
The river card completed the board with the and Haveson fired 5,000. Friedberg mucked his hand and dropped to 18,725 in chips. Haveson claimed to have ace-king and moved up to 45,000 in chips.
Within the opening several hands, a short-stacked JJ Liu found herself all in with versus . For some reason, the camera crew were summoned and the action halted for a good couple of minutes for what was likely to be a split pot. I decided to not hang around, and as no screams, yelps, or cries of pain were heard, I assumed the pot was chopped. Liu, therefore, remains on the 20,000 mark.
The gentleman in the hijack opened for 1,100, only for Yuji Masaki cutoff to make it 2,800. In the big blind, Phil Ivey went all in. The hijack folded, but Masaki called all in, barely covered by Ivey.
Ivey:
Masaki:
Flop:
No help there.
Turn: bink!
Ivey was suddenly in the lead.
River: re-bink!
The better hand won in the end, and after a cruel glimpse of hope on the turn, Ivey was crippled. He remained in the game, but was down to just 1,900.
A throat cut signified his exit, so I knew to tread carefully. "All gone in three hands," sighed Kevin O'Connell. "Queens into aces, ace-nine beaten by ace-seven, then ace-queen losing to eights."
So, the complete set: a bad beat, a coinflip and a cooler.
The button limped in and Phil Galfond made it 1,400 to go from the big blind. The button called and they saw a flop. Galfond led out for 1,300, the button raised to 8,200 and Galfond called. The on the turn brought checks from both players, as did the on the river.
Galfond turned over for a pair of eights and a busted straight draw, but the button had him with for top pair and took down the pot.