Michael Mizrachi was betting the entire way with his opponents calling down. Eugene Katchalov folded on fifth, but the other player came along to seventh before he finally folded to Mizrachi's bet. The player showed another , which gave him two pair and that's not a good thing to have in Razz. Mizrachi won the pot without showdown and moved to 36,000 in chips.
Brett Richey: (X)(X) / - fold
Andrew Barber: (X)(X) /
Brett Richey completed and Andrew Barber raised. Richey called and then called on fourth and fifth as well. On sixth street, Barber bet and Richey finally decided to give it up.
Picking up the action on fourth street, John Juanda bet after Chino Rheem checked. Rheem made the call. On fifth street, Juanda picked up the lead with king high and bet. Rheem called again before checked on sixth street when he took back the lead with ace high. Juanda bet and Rheem called. On seventh street, both players checked.
Juanda's down cards were the for a pair of aces. "Aces are good," said Rheem and he mucked his hand.
The following players have all just taken their seat in today's tournament.
They unfortunately don't have a full table, and consequently the Tournament Director is transferring some players from around the room so that play can begin for the new arrivals.
"They'll never bubble me. I'll just ante myself in!"
"I forgot you're rich and have money while I'm broke!"
"You've never had it tough kid. Try grinding $40/$80 just to pay rent!"
This was just a few of the key quotes during Mike "The Mouth" Matusow's conversation to Justin "BoostedJ" Smith in relation to a few events that Smith has bubbled.
Eli Elezra called us over to let us know some inside information on a last-longer bet he has in place with Mike Matusow. The bet is for $10,000, but if the player that lasts the longest makes the money, it's for $20,000. There is also a little more to the bet than just money, and as far as we're concerned is the best part of the bet.
Whoever loses, must shave their head. We're not talking just buzzing all your hair off either, we're talking "with a razor," as Elezra put it. This is going to be one heck of a sweat for both players and we'll keep you updated on the progress of it.
As it stands right now, Matusow has about 32,000 to Elezra's 22,000.
Hopefully all of our readers are enjoying PokerNews' coverage of the 2011 World Series of Poker. We're proud to be the official live reporting team again this year and it wouldn't be without all of your support. We'd just like to remind everyone that with such massive field sizes in many of these events, we're unable to track every single player in the chips counts as often as we'd like to.
Things on the tournament floor are constantly changing from hand to hand and we know you want every single piece of information you can handle. Many pros in all of these events update their Twitter account on the regular, so you might want to check out the PokerNews Twitter page to see what the players themselves are saying about their progress in the events.