Conor Beresford raised to 1,600 from late position and Aram Sargsyan three-bet to 5,700. The rest of the table folded and Beresford four-bet all in for 21,800. Sargsyan folded and Beresford won the pot.
Action was opened by Diego Montone only to be three-bet by Mario Trattou to 3,600, Montone made the call.
The flop came 6♣10♣A♥ and this time Trattou led out for 2,000 and was three-bet to 8,000 by Montone. He made the call and the two players saw the 7♦ hit the turn. Montone checked and Trattou announced he was all in.
Montone asked his opponent "Why so much?" and then proceeded to muck his cards.
Juha Helppi raised to 2,000 from late position and picked up a call before Tomas Jozonis moved all in for around 20,000. Helppi made the call and had his opponent well covered as the cards were flipped.
Tomas Jozonis: A♠10♣
Juha Helppi: 10♥10♦
The board ran out K♠10♠2♣Q♠4♥ to give Helppi a set of tens on the flop. Jozonis turned a flush draw and backdoor straight draw but the river came a blank and Helppi held to win the pot, sending Jozonis to the rail.
On the latest episode of the PokerNews Podcast, Chad Holloway, Connor Richards, and Matt Hansen come to you from both the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Paradise in The Bahamas!
In regards to the WSOP Paradise, the crew talk about the surprise appearance of 2022 EPT Prague champ Jordan Saccucci, who was a week removed from being arrested in Canada on home robbery charges. His stay didn’t last long in the Main Event as casino officials removed him from contention. Find out what happened here.
They then discuss Phil Hellmuth’s grand entrance as Poseidon flocked by 17 mermaids and a Bahamian marching band, highlight bracelet winners from the series thus far, and Erik Seidelcapturing his 10th gold bracelet, becoming just the fifth player in history to do so. Connor even grabbed a winner interview with the Poker Hall of Famer.
David Kaufmann raised to 2,200 from under the gun and Hussein Abud three-bet to 8,500 from the next seat across. Kaufmann then four-bet all in for 38,500 and Abud called with the bigger stack. Players flipped their cards.
David Kaufmann: A♥K♦
Hussein Abud: Q♥Q♦
The board ran out 4♣7♠8♠K♠6♥. Abud had queens, but Kaufmann turned a pair of kings to get ahead and win the pot. He doubled up and left Abud short.
We got to the action with the all in triangle in front of Lyudmil Ivanov for his remaining 20,000 chips and Gregoire Auzoux was deep in thought. He did eventually make the call on the board of 7♦3♣A♠10♦K♦ with A♣5♦, which beat his opponent's hand of Q♥2♥.