From the button, Brian Rast raised to 65,000. Anthony Legg called out of the small blind, and Alex Lynskey called from the big blind. The dealer dealt the flop, and action was checked to Rast. He bet 100,000, Legg folded, and Lynskey called.
The turn paired the board with the , and Lynskey opted to lead out with a bet of 145,000. Rast folded, and Lynskey won the pot.
Brian Rast opened for 65,000 from the cutoff seat, and then Anthony Legg reraised to 200,000 on the button. Rast called, and the dealer fanned the flop. Rast checked, and Legg bet 125,000. Rast check-raised all in, and Legg quickly called to put himself at risk for 1.18 million total on the flop. He had the for top set, and Rast held the for bottom pair and a gutshot straight draw.
The turn meant Rast could only hope for a chop, but the river couldn't produce it. Legg won the pot and boomed his way to over 2.8 million in chips.
From under the gun, Anthony Legg raised to 80,000. Alex Lynskey then three-bet to 175,000 from the cutoff seat, and play folded over to Brian Rast in the big blind. Rast put in a cold four-bet to 450,000, and Legg got out of the way. Lynskey studied for a little bit, then folded, and Rast won the pot.
Joel Douaglin came back from dinner last level with a strategy to limp a lot. He's mixed that up a bit this level. The limp is still there but he's not calling raises anymore, he's shoving for two million chips!
He completed from the small blind and chip leader Lennart Uphoff raised to 120,000 from the big blind. With a double hand motion, he moved all in for 1.93 million. Uphoff tanked for several minutes before folding.
The hand previous he shoved over a button raise from Grant Levy. Got to love the unorthodox player who mixes things up a little!
Joel Douaglin limped the small blind and then called when Lennart Uphoff exercised his option with a raise to 120,000. The flop saw Douaglin check and Uphoff bet 90,000. Douaglin woke up with a check-raise to 200,000, and Uphoff responded by sliding out a three-bet to 350,000.
Douaglin immediately announced that he was all in and Uphoff snap-folded his hand.
Not many recent hands on table 31 have made it past the flop but a small one between Lennart Uphoff and Gerald Douaglin made it to showdown.
The New Caledonian raised to 85,000 from the small blind and Uphoff defended his big blind to see an flop spread across the felt. Both players checked to the turn where Douaglin's 80,000 bet was called. The river was checked and Douglin opened for a rivered pair but lost out to his opponent's .
Richard Lyndaker opened for 85,000 under the gun and called when Grant Levy three-bet to 235,000 from the big blind. The flop saw Levy continue for 290,000, and Lyndaker thought long and hard before releasing his hand.