Roman Korenev had managed to spin his stack up a little, but he was all in for just over 60,000. It folded to Adrian Moreno in the big blind, who said he shouldn’t even look but nevertheless peeked at one and announced a call.
Korenev:
Moreno:
The board ran out . Moreno got some teasing about the accidental slowroll, but there were no complaints from Korenev as he headed to the payout desk.
Emily Larson raised it up to 40,000 from under the gun, and [Removed:297] three bet it to 110,000. It folded around to Cannon Lim in the big blind, and he spent about two minutes in the tank before he released his hand. Larson quickly called.
The flop came down . Larson check called a continuation bet of 85,000 from Wenigwieser, and the hit the turn. Both players checked that card, and the same action occurred on the river.
Larson tabled for fifth pair, and it was good enough to get a muck from Wenigwieser.
Kyle Shappelle has been quite active since he took his seat over 90 minutes late today, and it was working well for him before he took a small hit against Matt Berkey.
First, Shappelle took a nice pot off of Dan Heimiller. The two players had already built a pot of over 350,000 when the flop came . Heimiller fired out 225,000, and Shappelle thought it over for about 90 seconds before he put in a raise to 600,000. Heimiller checked his hole cards before sending them in, giving a nice pot to Shappelle.
Shappelle lost a chunk of that profit on the next hand, though, when he called the all-in of Matt Berkey preflop. Shappelle held and was racing against the of Berkey. The board ran out , and Berkey's full house was good enough to double his stack up to 675,000.
Despite taking that hit, Shappelle has seen a big boost to his stack today since he sat down.
With a substantial pot of about 200,000 already brewing and the completed board reading , Samuel Vonkennel bet 95,000 from the small blind into his lone opponent, Giuseppe Pantaleo in the big blind. Pantaleo went into the tank for about 30 seconds before he called and flipped over for a pair of eights, which was good enough to win the pot.
Jaspal Brar lost most of his stack in a recent hand and was virtually all in from the big blind. Raul Martinez shoved from late position, and Brar tossed his last couple of chips in without looking.
Martinez rolled over , and Brar revealed his cards one at a time. First the , then the . Brar had one overcard, but he didn't hit, as the board ran out .
With about 100,000 chips already in the middle and the board reading , Alexander Haber bet 40,000 from the small blind and Emily Larson called from the button.
The fell on the turn and both players checked.
The river brought the and they checked again. Larson tabled and took the pot with her pocket aces.
Roman Rogovskyi moved all in, and Antonio Graham called.
“Man, that’s bad news for me if he doesn’t even want a count,” said Rogovskyi.
There were no other callers, and Rogovskyi turned over his . Graham was counting out the call of 215,000, but the dealer told him they’d sort the money after. Rogovskyi asked him to show ace-king. Graham, though, turned over .
The board ran out . Queens were good, and Rogovskyi was felted.