Michael Sumner checked to David Knuckles, who bet 8,000 on the ![]()
![]()
flop. Sumner put Knuckles all in for just about 1,000 more, and Knuckles called. Sumner turned over ![]()
after the
and
hit the board, giving him a set, and Knuckles mucked his cards.
Michael Sumner checked to David Knuckles, who bet 8,000 on the ![]()
![]()
flop. Sumner put Knuckles all in for just about 1,000 more, and Knuckles called. Sumner turned over ![]()
after the
and
hit the board, giving him a set, and Knuckles mucked his cards.
A player opened for 600 on the button and then called the shove of Aaron Clark, who had 9,700.
Clark: ![]()
Button: ![]()
Clark was in a dominating position, and his biggest concern was a chop after the first four cards came ![]()
![]()
![]()
, but a
river preserved his lead.
Gary Attebery put his last 4,325 in against three other players after a ![]()
![]()
flop. Only the player on the button called.
Button: ![]()
Attebery: ![]()
Attebery needed to fade clubs or running sixes, and he did so as the
and
completed the board.
Level: 5
Blinds: 150/300
Ante: 25
Ken Hert bet 3,000 after two players checked to him on an ![]()
![]()
flop, and only the player under the gun called. On the
turn, the under-the-gun player check-called 5,000 more. An
completed the board, and the first player led out for 4,000. Hert put him all in for about 5,500 more, and the player thought it over for a minute before tossing in his chips.
Hert showed ![]()
for top boat and took the pot.
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Level: 4
Blinds: 100/200
Ante: 25
A player under the gun bet 1,125 on an ![]()
![]()
flop, and the hijack made the call. Brad Rhodes popped it to 2,800 on the button, and only the player in the hijack came along. Rhodes pushed all in, putting his opponent at risk for about 6,000 on the
turn. The player in the hijack showed a
and folded.
Players are on a 10-minute break.
We found Neil Patel all in before the flop for his last 5,550, having been call in two spots. The dealer put down a board of ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
as the two active players quickly checked down.
"I can't catch anything besides my f****** breath," one of the players said, tossing ![]()
into the middle.
"You have a pair?" Patel asked the third player, who shook his head. "Ace-king."
Patel's unpaired hand had somehow held up, and he is back near the starting stack.