From the cutoff, Eric Mizrachi opened to 2,000 only to have the small blind move all in for roughly 10,000. Mizrachi made the call with little hesitation.
Mizrachi:
Opponent:
The board rolled out to see Mizrachi collect the pot to move to 35,000 while sending his opponent tumbling to the rail.
A quick stroll over to table 362 saw Amar Tiwari holding a ton of chips - and when we say a ton we mean it - as he has 24 stacks of black 100-denomination chips which amount to 48,000.
Once you factor in the 500 and 1000-denomination chips, plus the two empty seats, one can only assume he is the one that dispatched of those players. As he now sits with over 140,000, he is our clear chip leader.
We caught up with the action as the board read and Maya Geller, wife of poker pro Patrik Antonius, found herself all in against Valerie Cross.
Geller tabled the and her wheel straight was ahead of the two pair held by Cross, who showed down . Cross needed to spike a four-outer to come from behind and eliminate Geller.
River:
The dealer flipped over a dagger for Geller and she hit the rail while Cross stacked Geller's chips.
On a flop of we found Hunter Frey check-calling a 4,400-chip bet from the cutoff. After the on the turn, it went check, check.
With the dealer dropping the on the river, Frey pushed out an 11,000-chip bet only to have his opponent move all in for roughly 32,000.
Frey dived deep into the tank before finding a call and tabling his . His opponent tabled his and was forced to wave goodbye to the rail as Frey soared to 105,000 courtesy of a mammoth call.
Robert Lewis found himself facing a decision for his tournament life after Marios Savvides pushed all in with the board reading . Lewis made a tough call with his and found himself ahead of the held by Savvides but trailing statistically to the pair and flush draw.
Lewis was dodging 14 outs on the turn and river and both players stood while the dealer decided their fates.
Turn:
River:
Lewis dodged the deck and Savvides paced around the table while shipping 9,300 to his opponent, saying "Wow... wow, how could i miss?"