Faraz Jaka raised to 390,000 from the small blind with 
and John Dibella defended his big blind with 
.
The flop came down 

and Jaka continued out with a bet of 350,000. Dibella folded, giving the pot to Jaka.
Faraz Jaka raised to 390,000 from the small blind with 
and John Dibella defended his big blind with 
.
The flop came down 

and Jaka continued out with a bet of 350,000. Dibella folded, giving the pot to Jaka.
Xuan Liu had
in early position, and she came in raising to 320,000. Around on the button, Anthony Gregg was dealt
, and he took pause to consider. It was a minute or two before he settled on a fold, and the blinds surrendered to let Liu take it down.
Faraz Jaka raised to 360,000 from early position with 
and Anthony Gregg shoved from the big with 
. Jaka gave it up and Gregg took it down.
Under the gun, John Dibella opened to 350,000, and the table folded around to the blinds. In the big, Faraz Jaka was holding
, and he defended to see a flop.
It came
, and Dibella only had to make a continuation bet of 400,000 to drag the pot right there. He had the mighty
, by the way.
David Bernstein shoved under the gun with 
for 1,510,000 and found no callers.
Faraz Jaka raised to 375,000 in the cutoff with at least the
in his hand and Xuan Liu three bet with 
to 800,000 from the big blind. Jaka gave it up, giving the pot Liu.
Kyle Julius was in early position with
, and he opened the pot to 325,000. Over on the button, Ruben Visser peeked down at
, and that was good enough to three-bet shove for 865,000 total. When it came back to Julius, he made the quick call, and Visser was flipping for his tournament life.
The
flop was a disaster for the Dutchman as Julius flopped his pair to take a huge lead. He was two cards from the knockout, and the turn
and river
were both close but no cigar.
Visser's sixes lose the race, and it's the final hand of his day. A bit frustrated, he wished the table luck and headed off to the cashier. He'll pick up $156,400 for his work this week, and hopefully that will be of some consolation.
Julius has squeaked back into the chip lead now with just shy of 8.5 million.
Mark Drover shoved from the cutoff with 
for 1,360,000 and Ruben Visser called from the big blind with 
.
The flop came down 

to give Visser a flush draw, but the
turn and
river were no help to Visser, who is now the short stack at the table.