From under the gun, Senh Ung raised to 1,025. Chris Moneymaker called from the cutoff seat, and Nick Petrangelo called from the big blind, and the flop came out . After Petrangelo checked, Ung bet 1,900. Moneymaker called, and Petrangelo folded.
The turn was the , and that was followed by a check from both Ung and Moneymaker. The river then completed the board with the , and both players checked again.
With the break clock already ticking, Dario Sammartino was embroiled in a tough river decision on a board of . He was in the cutoff facing an all-in wager from big blind Thomas Hueber, and the Italian high roller tanked a few minutes into the break, counted out the necessary chips, and placed him in the middle.
Hueber quickly flipped and Sammartino mucked and headed to break.
Dan Colman raised preflop to 1,200 and his opponent reraised to 2,700. Colman called. When the flop came , Colman checked. His opponent bet 3,500 and Colman called.
The turn was the and both players checked. They both checked the on the river and Colman showed the bottom end of a straight with and won the pot.
Jeff Gross just eliminated his opponent after four diamonds hit the board and gave Gross a flush. Gross was about to fold before his opponent tried to guess what he held.
Gross raised in early position to 1,000 and his opponent shoved all in from the big blind. Gross was then faced with seemingly a tough decision. As he was deciding whether to call the 12,800 all-in bet.
"Do you have king jack?" he asked.
Gross looked at him and tilted his head slightly, "is that good?"
"I was going to fold, you may have just talked yourself into a double up or talked yourself into a bust."
Gross verified the total bet once more before calling. His opponent turned over and Gross turned over .
"I guess you talked yourself into a double up," said Gross.
The board had other plans when it ran out , giving Gross a diamond flush and the bot.
Kathy Lehne fired 1,200 on the flop before Mike McDonald raised to 3,600. Lehne called, and the dealer added the to the board on the turn. Lehne checked, McDonald bet 5,500, and Lehne called.
After the completed the board on the river, Lehne bet 20,000, which was enough to put McDonald and his remaining stack of 10,250 all in. McDonald tanked for a little bit, then called. Lehne tabled the , but McDonald had the and won the pot.