The action folded to Bryan Devonshire who opened to 140,000 on the button. Ben Lamb defended his big blind, and the flop fell . Lamb checked, Devonshire continued for 165,000, and Lamb called.
The action went check-check after the turned, and Lamb checked a third time when the was dealt on the river. Devonshire swiftly tossed out 420,000, sending Lamb into the tank. After nearly three minutes of thought, he released, and Devonshire took down the pot.
Andrey Pateychuk raised under the gun only to have Frank Sinopoli move all in preflop for 890,000. Action folded back to Pateychuk and he made the call.
Showdown
Pateychuk:
Sinopoli:
Sinopoli was way out in front and stayed there as the board ran out an uneventful .
Aleksandr Mozhnyakov opened with a raise from under the gun to 130,000, and it folded around to Gregory Kaplan in the big blind who reraised to 275,000. Mozhnyakov made the call.
The flop came . Kaplan checked, Mozhnyakov bet 375,000, and Kaplan called. The turn brought the and another check from Kaplan. Mozhyakov bet 1.8 million this time, and Kaplan went deep into the tank. Finally Mozhyakov called the clock, and eventually Kaplan let his hand go.
Afterwards, Kaplan offered Mozhyakov $100 to get him to show, but Mozhyakov grinned as he refused. He did, however, show his cards to the portable hole card camera, noting "you will see soon" to his opponent.
Mozhyakov has 7.9 million now, while Kaplan slips to 1.8 million.
Philipp Gruissem raised to 130,000 from middle position and was met with an all-in reraise to 460,000 by Mario Silvestri on the button. The blinds got out of the way and action was back on Gruissem. He thought for a few moments before saying, "I have a really bad hand."
At that point, Silvestri flipped over his . "What are you doing?" asked Gruissem.
"I thought you said call," Silvestri responded with a bit of confusion in his voice. After seeing his opponent's hand, that is exactly what Gruissem did.
Showdown
Gruissem:
Silvestri:
Gruissem knew he'd be flipping if he called, so he obviously decided it was a good time to race. The flop kept Silvestri ahead, as did the turn. In order to eliminated his opponent, Gruissem needed to catch either a king or six on the river. Luckily for Silvestri, the appeared an he doubled.
On the flip side of things, Silvestri also received a one-round penalty for prematurely exposing his cards.
Our last woman standing, Erika Moutinho, raised to 140,000 under the gun and received a single call in the form of Tri Huynh in middle position. Moutinho kept the pressure on with a 260,000 bet on the flop, Huynh called, and the appeared on the turn.
Both players decided to check, the hit the river, and Moutinho fired out 375,000. Huynh snap-called and showed for a straight, which was good against the of Moutinho.
Nelson Robinson opened for 140,000 from early position, then Gionni Demers reraised all in for 1.435 million from the button. It folded back to Robinson who made the call.
Robinson had while Demers tabled . The flop arrived , pairing Robinson once but Demers twice. The turn was the , giving Robinson a second pair as well, but the river meant the pot belonged to Demers.
Demers moves to about 3 million, while Robinson has 5.85 million.
Stuart Tuvey was just all in for his tourney life. After a James Page button raise, Tuvey shoved all in for 1.27 million from the big blind and Page called. Tuvey had and Page .
The flop came , giving Tuvey a set but Page a gutshot straight draw. The turn was the and river the , and Tuvey survived.
Tuvey has 2.71 million now, while Page tumbles to 1.945 million.