From middle position, Teun Kuilboer raised to 9,000. Shyam Srinivasan reraised out of the small blind to 26,000, and then Kuilboer reraised all in for 99,000. Srinivasan gave it up, and Kuilboer won the pot.
Heinz Traut was just all in for 13,500 chips, as he shoved under the gun, and the player in the big blind called.
Traut:
Opponent:
The board ran out and the queen on the river improved Traut's hand after his opponent flopped a pair of jacks.
"Yes!" Traut yelled, as he kept his chances of making the money alive.
On the very next hand, the last hand before the break, Jason Lavallee raised on Traut's big blind, and the German took a very long time before folding his cards.
"Just think about all the things you can buy with €8,800," Lavallee jokingly said.
As Traut remained silent, Lavallee continued, "I'm not sure about you, but to me €8,800 is a lot of money."
Eventually Traut folded, and Lavallee showed, .
"You know I would've at least made a straight," Lavallee said, as all the players went on a break.
Players are now on their second 20-minute break of the day. The field will return close to the money, as the field is just three spots away from bursting the bubble.
Former World Series of Poker Main Event fifth-place finisher Jeremy Ausmus has worked his way back up to 275,000 in chips thanks to winning four hands just before the break.
On the first hand, Ausmus check-called 9,000 on the flop against Jude Ainsworth. The turn was the , and Ausmus checked again. Ainsworth also checked, and the river completed the board with the . Ausmus led with a bet of 20,000, and Ainsworth called.
Ausmus tabled the for a runner-runner Broadway straight, and Ainsworth mucked.
On the next hand, Ausmus and Elliot Smith saw the flop in a blind-versus-blind hand. Ausmus was first from the small blind and bet 4,000. Smith called, and the turn was the . Ausmus fired 10,000, and Smith folded.
Two hands later, Ausmus three-bet to 22,000 from the cutoff seat after Chris Walker opened with a raise to 9,000 from the hijack seat. Play folded back to Walker, he folded, and Ausmus won the pot.
And then on the final hand before the break, Ausmus and Peter Murphy were in action on the flop after Ausmus raised from the hijack seat preflop and Murphy called from the big blind. Murphy check-called a bet of 9,000 on the flop, and then both players checked the turn card.
After the fell on the river, Murphy checked, Ausmus bet 25,000, and Murphy gave it up.
Just before the break, Jens Kyllonen raised to 9,000 from the hijack seat. Steve Warburton reraised on the button to 26,000, and then Kyllonen reraised to 55,500. Warburton fired back with a reraise to 85,000, and Kyllonen called.
The flop came down , and Kyllonen checked. Warburton bet 54,000, and Kyllonen folded.
Warburton showed the for jack high, and Kyllonen commented, "Nice hand."
When we just arrived on the scene a huge pot was ongoing, and two players were already all in on the flop.
Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden was all in for the small blind for roughly 230,000, Dominykas Karmazinas was all in from the big blind for 172,000 and the action was on Aleks Dimitrov in early position.
It seemed as though Lodden had check-raised all in, followed by Karmazinas who called all in. After a while Dimitrov called, creating a massive three-way all in.
Dimitrov:
Karmazinas:
Lodden:
Dimitrov was one diamond, and the board not pairing, away from knocking out two players, but the turn and the river gave Karmazinas a triple up. Lodden won the side pot, but he still lost chips, and Dimitrov was the biggest victim in this clash.
Jonas Lauck was all in against Victor Bogdanov and Pavel Plesuv on the board, although it was unclear when his money went in. At the showdown, Lauck showed the for ace high. Bogdanov had the for two pair, but it was Plesuv's for a straight that won the pot to eliminate Lauck.
Carlos Vallve Arias raised from under the gun, and Diego Ventura shoved all in from the button. After both blinds folded, Arias made the call to put Ventura at risk.
Diego Ventura:
Carlos Vallve Arias:
The board ran out , and Ventura hit the rail just shy of the money.