On the outer feature table Kyle Julius was eliminated. He was all in with against Javier Etayo's and the flop came ! Julius was already packing his stuff and getting ready to leave as the turn came the and the river was the .
Jackie Glazier has also been knocked out, she raised preflop from late position and then called off with against Jamil Kanji's . She picked up a flush draw on the flop but couldn't hit on the board.
When we arrived at Table 32, Ludovic Geilich had what looked like a four-bet of 24,000 or so in front of him. The three-bettor, Dhru Patel, called in position, and the flop fell . Geilich check-called a bet of 25,300, and both players checked it down as the turn and river came , respectively.
Geilich turned over for effectively ace-high, and Patel mucked his hand.
Andy Mosely is known to be a high stakes cash game player but you would almost assume he would take it easy being deep in this tournament.
Assume again.
"How many walks did I get?" Moseley asked jokingly when he just showed up an hour late to Day 3 of this event.
"Quite a lot actually," Salman Behbehani replied with a smile as Moseley started counting his stack.
"I lost only 25,000 actually," Moseley said with a smile and that made Joey Lovelady, to his immediate left, also reconsider his decision of showing up on time.
"I lost a lot more in the hour you were gone," Lovelady said as he's lost almost half his stack during the first hour of play.
We later overheard Moseley say he was in a very juicy cash game all night and didn't get to bed until 7:30 in the morning. On the question if he won Moseley gave some quick cliff notes about his session indicating he lost quite a lot. Good thing Moseley still has a lot of chips in this tournament and eventually he could make up for his losses with a good result here.
After a series of bets on a flop of , Jan Sjavik was all in and at risk for 134,900 holding . Jan Bendik called with , and begin muttering under his breath when the turned, giving Sjavik a straight.
The completed the board, giving Sjavik a six-card straight for kicks and giggles, and he doubled to 320,000 chips. Bendik fell to 167,000.
"All in and a call," we heard a dealer shout. We made our way over just in time to see Paul Volpe flip with Vasili Firsau.
Firsau:
Volpe:
The flop contained no help for Volpe, and he got up out of his seat. The turn brought him one step closer to elimination, and the river sent him to the rail.