Daniel Colman announced an all in bet for 36,400 from early position and it folded around to Grayson Ramage who shipped all in over the top. The rest of the table folded and the hands were revealed.
Colman:
Ramage:
"I deserve an ace," said Colman.
The flop came hit the felt.
"I deserve a club!" quickly said Colman with the same vocal cadence.
He received neither on the turn, but his second wish was fulfilled with the on the river. Colman picked up the pot and doubled to around 80,000. Ramage, on the other hand, was crippled to just around 10,000.
When we reached the table, Sylvain Loosli had a bet of 14,500 sitting in front of him on a flop of . James Calderaro raised, splashing six blue T5,000 chips in front of him, and Loosli tanked for a bit before moving all in for 86,000.
As Loosli announced his all-in wager, Calderaro was reaching to his side for a drink he had sitting on an empty chair. He grabbed it, pulled the cup to his lips, took a long sip, and called.
The November Niner instantly turned his hand over, revealing , and Calderaro studied it for a second or two before showing for a set of sixes.
The dealer rapped the felt, burned a card, and spiked the on the turn.
Calderaro slammed the table with his hand in anger, and was still steaming by the time the completed the board. Loosli shipped the monster pot, doubling to 200,000 chips, while Calderaro plummeted to 45,000.
Facing a standard open, Team PokerStars Pro Liv Boeree three-bet in the cutoff. Eugene Todd "Bro" put in a four-bet, and the action folded back to Boeree, who moved all in for 33,100. Todd instantly called.
Boeree:
Todd:
According to the PokerNews Odds Calculator, Boeree was an 87 percent favorite heading into the flop, but when the dealer fanned , her odds plummeted to 55 percent.
Fortunately for her, both the turn () and the river () were both bricks, and Boeree doubled to 76,000 chips. Todd fell to 44,000.
After an under-the-gun raise to 4,500 and a call from the player on the button, Isaac Baron shoved from the small blind for 23,500. The original raiser called all in for a little less, while the player on the button folded.
Baron tabled and defeated his opponent's when the board ran out .
Brazilian poker player Alessandra Correa Dos Santos just moved all in after a raise for 35,400 and the initial raiser made the call.
Dos Santos:
Opponent:
The board ran out and even though four hearts showed up neither player made a flush. Dos Santos doubled up and her opponent was left with just a few thousand chips.
With about 45,000 in the pot and the board reading , Maria Ho checked to Amanda Musumeci who bet 16,200. Ho called after a few moments to see river, which she checked. Musumeci took about 45 seconds before she shoved for roughly 52,000, which sent Ho into the tank for a good 90 seconds before she folded.