Yuval Bronshtein bet fifth street as we joined the action already in progress. Shorr raised it to 6,000 total. Bronshtein wasn't happy about it and sat back in his chair to consider. Another 3,000 was a significant portion of his remaining stack. Mickey Appleman got bored and wandered away from the table. When he came back, Yuvee was still thinking. Eventually he threw in the bet. Shorr paired his eight on sixth while Bronshtein bricked and couldn't call another bet. He is down to just 6,000 and busy trying to get Shorr to tell him what he had, but Shorr's not saying a word.
Catching the action on sixth street, we found Phil Laak betting out with Mike Matusow smooth-calling before he opted to raise seventh with Laak calling.
Laak: (X)(X) / / (X)
Matusow: (X)(X) / / (X)
After having his bet called on seventh, Matusow tabled his to scoop the pot and move to 27,000 as Laak slips to 38,000 in chips.
Catching the action on sixth street, we found Tom Dwan raising all in into David Singer and a third opponent. Archie Karas was all in on a previous street as both the active players called Dwan's raise before checking down seventh.
Action folded to Alexandre Luneau on the button and he raised. Felipe Ramos called from the small blind and [Removed:163] called from the big blind. The three players took the flop and action checked to the preflop raiser Luneau. He bet and Ramos called. Sheikh also called.
The landed on the turn and all three players checked. The river then completed the board with the . Action checked around again.
"I got it," said Ramos before turning over the for a set of eights. Sheikh and Luneau mucked and Ramos won the pot.
On a flop we found Tommy Hang check-calling a bet from Barry Greenstein before check-raising the on the turn. Greenstein made the call, and when the landed on the turn, both players checked it down.
Hang tabled his , and once Greenstein mucked, he moved to roughly 88,000 in chips.