Scott Baumstein open shoved from early position for about 120,000 and quickly was called by a middle position player. He was in a world of hurt.
Baumstein:
Opponent:
Baumstein began the traditional prayer to the poker gods, he got out of his seat, ready to go and immediately his prayers were answered when the board came to double him up.
Todd Terry just eliminated one of our short stacks despite being dominated, he flipped against his opponent's but the board came to backdoor Terry into the nuts for the pot.
Ryan D'Angelo opened to 13,500 preflop and was called by two players; one of which was Byron Kaverman .
D'Angelo fired out a continuation-bet of 21,000 and was called by Kaverman before the button moved all in for 138,000. D'Angelo folded, but Kaverman made the call to put his opponent at risk.
Kaverman:
Opponent:
With Kaverman needing to fade plenty of outs with any diamond, ten or six giving his opponent the pot, the on the turn further increased his outs by five. Fortunately for Kaverman, the river landed the to see him eliminate his opponent while soaring to 800,000 in chips.
A player made it 15,000 from late position and Neil Willerson three-bet from the cutoff to 40,000. The action folded back around and the original raiser four-bet all in. Willerson shook his head, obviously not happy with the situation that he had gotten himself into.
"Call", said Willerson, tabling
His opponent flipped up and we were off to the races. The flop fell and Willerson hung his head. He did not seem to enjoy making the call preflop and most certainly wasn't happy post flop. The turned and the river also bricked out for him, coming . Willerson shipped 145,000 away from his stack and sat staring at the table, dejected.
Tobias Peters is out after he called a four bet all in with but wasn't able to spike against his opponent's when the board came . There's around seven tables remaining of bracelet hopefuls.