J.P. Kelly raised to 250 preflop and an opponent called. The flop ran out . Kelly checked the flop and his opponent bet 525. Kelly reraised to 1,300 and his opponent made the call.
The turn brought the and both players checked. The hit on the river and Kelly led out with a bet of 1,100. His opponent quickly folded.
After the table folded around the small blind limped, and it was Bertrand Grospellier in the big blind who raised to 300. The small blind called and it was off to the flop.
On a board both players checked, it wasn't until the turn that the small blind put out a bet of 425. Grospellier made the call and was allowed to see a river.
The on the river lead to another bet from the small blind of 600 and another call from ElkY. The small blind showed for a pair of nines ace kicker and Grospellier mucked.
Mark Seif and an unknown player raised back and forth to get all the money in on the flop. Seif had flopped the nizzletons with the for the Broadway straight. His opponent held a set of kings with the . The turn was the and the river the to fill up Seif's opponent and give him the double up.
David Sands has been eliminated here in the early goings. His pocket tens went down to an opponent's . Sands placed third in yesterday's Event #22: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha for over $113,000.
In a three way pot, the flop was and it was checked to Candio, who was in position on his two opponents. He bet 475 and the first player raised to 1,650. The other player folded and Candio quickly moved all in. His opponent, who had 8,500 in chips going to the flop, was covered but decided to make the call with . Candio had and needed a spade and to miss the full house redraws in order to ship the pot. The turn bricked off with the as did the river and Candio now falls back down to 3,800.
Theo Tran was facing a raise from an early position player to 250. He decided to three-bet from late position to 800 and it folded back around to the original raiser who moved all in for 3,425. Tran made the call and the cards were on their backs.
Tran:
Opponent:
Tran immediately tapped the table to give his opponent credit for good hand. His sportsmanship didn't win him any karma, however, as the board ran out . He is now down to just 1,600 chips.