Facing a cutoff raise to 4,000, Brett Richey pushed for his remaining 29,700 into the middle. Farhan Madhani iso-shoved from the big blind to force the original raiser's cards into the muck.
Richey:
Madhani:
The flop of gave Richey a huge lead in the hand, and when the and completed the board, Richey doubled through to 62,000 as Madhani was left with roughly 14,000 in chips.
The internet phenom Randy "nanonoko" Lew is still in contention, despite remaining short-stacked.
Lew found a caller in the big blind after raising 3,300 from early position.
The flop came and both players checked to see a turn.
The turn brought the and this time the big blind player led out for 3,800. Lew made the call.
The slowed the big blind down, however, who opted to check. Lew fired 5,200 and his opponent folded, earning Lew the pot and chipping him up to 35,000.
Hopefully all of our readers are enjoying PokerNews' coverage of the 2011 World Series of Poker. We're proud to be the official live reporting team again this year and it wouldn't be without all of your support. We'd just like to remind everyone that with such massive field sizes in many of these events, we're unable to track every single player in the chips counts as often as we'd like to.
Things on the tournament floor are constantly changing from hand to hand and we know you want every single piece of information you can handle. Many pros in all of these events update their Twitter account on the regular, so you might want to check out the PokerNews Twitter page to see what the players themselves are saying about their progress in the events.
Action folded to the winner of the 2008 Aruba Poker Classic Matt Brady in the small blind and he completed the bet. Darren Elias checked his option in the big blind and the two took a flop of . Brady bet 1,300 and Elias called.
Fourth street was the and Brady checked. After Elias reached for chips and bet 3,500, Brady made the call and the dealer placed the out on the river. Brady checked and Elias bet 9,600. Brady called, but couldn't beat the that Elias held for a full house.
Brady dropped to 56,000 in chips while Elias improved to 54,000.
Michael Noda, Mickey Petersen and Ben Zamani saw the flop of together. Noda was up first and checked. Petersen bet 3,600 and Zamani raised to 7,200. Noda then check-raised all in for about 80,000, having both players covered. Petersen called and Zamani folded.
Noda showed the for top pair and a flush draw. Petersen held the for middle set. The turn brought the and the river the , which kept Petersen's hand in front and doubled him up. He was all in for 29,000 on the flop and doubled to approximately 75,000. Noda was knocked back to 50,000.
We caught up with the action just as Erick Lindgren, who was on the small blind, bet 11,000 on the turn with the board reading . JC Tran made the call from the big blind.
The river revealed the , prompting a 17,000 bet from Lindgren. Tran counted out a call and shipped it into the middle. Lindgren showed the for a rivered wheel. Tran mucked his cards.
"So that's how you make a final table?" another player asked.
On a flop of we found Dutch player Robbie Verspui all in against David Williams.
Williams:
Verspui:
With Verspui needing to fade both hearts and straight outs, the on the turn would change little, but it would be the on the river that would send him to the rail as Williams moves to roughly 120,000 in chips.