On a board Justin Schwartz and WIll Molson were involved a raising war, culminating with Schwartz being all in for about 110,000 with . Molson had him demolished with .
The turn sealed the deal, making the river irrelevant.
Since we're now well and truly close to the money with just 82 players remaining, we at PokerNews thought it would be a good time to remind you exactly what everyone is playing for.
The top 81 players will pad their bankroll with a guaranteed $10,123, but it will be the final table where every player will be striving for as they look to take home their lion's share of the $4,065,500 prizepool and coveted gold bracelet.
Jason Potter raised to 8,000 and then Mike Wattel moved all in for 30,500 from the button. Everyone folded back to Potter and he made the call with the . Wattel had him crushed with the .
The board ran out clean for Wattel and he was able to double up on the first hand on the bubble.
Firstly Allen Bari doubled up the short-stack of the field when his was unable to outdraw the on a final board of .
On the same hand, Ricky Fohrenbach doubled when his held as the best hand against James Mackey on a board of . Fohrenbach moves to 365,000 as Mackey slips to roughly 80,000 in chips.
The Tournament Director has on numerous occasions asked the players to stay seated during hand-for-hand play.
Unfortunately poker players are sometimes bad listeners, and many are running round to see exactly how people's stacks are looking.
Jacqueline Hughes is copping the most attention as she has all but an ante in the current pot as play remains stalled while other tables complete their current hand.
Down to her last ante on the button, Jacqueline Hughes posted and was all in. JC Tran limped in and then Seth Berger raised all in from the cutoff seat for 48,000. Action folded back to Tran and he gave it up. First, Berger was pushed the small blind, big blind and Tran's limp before action was held up while the other tables finished.
After all the other tables had completed their hands, the cards were turned over to determine Hughes' fate. She held the and Berger the .
The flop came down and Berger stayed in front. Hughes chanted for a six, but the on the turn left her drawing dead. She got her wish on the river with the , but it was too late as she was drawing dead. Berger won the pot and eliminated Hughes, sending the remaining 81 players into the money.