Jon "PearlJammer" Turner raised under-the-gun for 5,000 and was met with an all-in raise for 70,000 from the cutoff. Turner called and was dejected to see his opponent turn over , which was an overwhelming favorite to Tuner's .
Turner mucked his hand when the flop came , which left him drawing dead. An irrelevant and came on the turn and river respectively.
Turner still has plenty of chips to play with, however, and is sitting with 165,000.
As we go deeper into the night here on Day 2 of the $1,000 No-Limit Hold'Em event, Layne Flack and Eric Mizrachi were spotted toasting each other with plastic cups of beer and exchanging tips on their favored types of whiskey.
While many players around the Amazon Room can be seen sporting intensely concentrated gazes, both Flack and Mizrachi appear to be relaxed and in the mood to have some fun while they pursue this WSOP bracelet.
Jordan "Jymaster11" Young continued his roller coaster ride on Day 2, after getting into an all-in confrontation with his . The flop read and the internet legend found his two-pair was ahead of his opponent's .
The on the turn was an interesting card for Young, keeping him in the lead while giving his opponent a backdoor flush draw. Young was poised to continue an incredible rush, in which he has repeatedly busted smaller stacks with inferior holdings, if he could dodge a four, an ace, a king or a spade on the next card.
River:
With that, Young's two-pair had been counterfeited and his short-stacked opponent collected a much needed double. The man known online as "Jymaster11" is still in healthy shape with a stack of about 220,000 chips.
Facing a raise to 5,000 from the hi-jack, Darryll Fish three-bet to 13,600 only to have the big blind move all in for 44,400. The original raiser folded, but Fish made the call.
Fish:
Opponent:
The board ran out to see Fish's jacks cut up by a flush as he sinks to 37,000 in chips.
Jon "PearlJammer" Turner has not had the best luck recently and an inattentive dealer seems to be making him impatient.
In a recent hand, a middle position player raised for 6,000 and Turner made the call from the small blind. The big blind folded but nothing happened for almost a minute. Turner eventually starting waving his arms and said, "Can we get this hand moving? I'd like to play this hand." The dealer apparently did not notice the big blind fold.
The dealer dealt out a flop of and both players checked. Again, nothing happened and Turner reminded the dealer that both of them had checked, clearly getting impatient.
Both players checked down the turn and river. Turner flipped up a pair of treys, which was good enough to scoop the pot. Turner is sitting with 150,000
After a flop of , Layne Flack faced a bet of 18,500 by Peter Gelencser, who was holding the button. Flack decided to peel one off and made the call, bringing the on the turn.
Flack checked to Gelencser and watched as the young player quietly announced that he was all-in.
The man known as "Back to Back," a nickname which comes from Flack's incredible capture of two WSOP bracelets in consecutive events during the summer of 2002, went deep into the tank as he thought through the previous action.
Flack took a few sips of his adult beverage and eventually stood to his feet, scratching his face as he went deeper into thought. We saw Flack's lips moving as he replayed the hand in his mind, and after about three minutes of reflection Flack decided to release his hand.
Gelencser flipped up and Flack broke into a big grin, knowing that he had come to the correct decision. He playfully began flipping cards over from the muck, searching for the potential river card to see if his outs would have arrived. Heading into the final break of the night, Flack is still in great shape and is looking to add a seventh bracelet to his already impressive collection.