Tony Gregg just saw Phillip McAllister limp on his big blind, after which the former PCA runner up raised to 140,000. McAllister called, and the flop brought out on which McAllister checked.
Gregg bet 90,00 on the flop and his opponent called.
The turn was the and now both players checked.
The river brought the and McAllister lead for 140,000, which was called by Gregg after about a minute.
Toby Lewis just raised under the gun and David Eldridge called from the cutoff after which Timothy Ulmer called from the big blind.
The flop came down and both Ulmer and Lewis checked to Eldridge who bet 120,000.
Ulmer was the only player to make the call, and on the turn the hit. Ulmer checked again, and this time Eldridge bet 240,000. Ulmer went into the tank for quite some time before folding, and he's now one of the shorter stacks.
Before the break, David Eldridge and Timothy Ulmer played a couple of pots, each taking one down.
In the first, Ulmer made it 100,000 on the button and Eldridge called in the big blind. Eldridge checked the flop, and Ulmer bet 100,000 more. Eldridge made it 220,000, and Ulmer called fairly fast. Check-check on the , and the arrived. Eldridge checked and folded to 225,000 from Ulmer.
The next hand, Ulmer opened for 80,000 in the cutoff and both blinds called. Everyone checked the flop and the board read on fourth. Ulmer bet 160,000 after two checks, and Eldridge raised to 360,000, which won him the pot.
Phillip McAllister limped the button, and he and Tony Gregg and Timothy Ulmer saw flop for the minimum price. Action checked to McAllister, who bet 40,000. Only Gregg called. Check-check on the and the double-paired the board. Gregg checked again, and McAllister fired 50,000. Gregg came out raising with 290,000, prompting some concern from McAllister. He ruffled his hair and muttered to himself as he tanked a few minutes into the break before releasing.
Randy Kritzer raised to 135,000 from the cutoff and received calls from Matt Waxman and Mike Watson on the button and in the big blind respectively. The flop saw Watson check, Kritzer bet 105,000 and Waxman call.
Watson then check-raised to 400,000, Kritzer called, and Waxman got out of the way to make it heads-up action to the turn, which both players checked. When the paired the board on the river, Watson checked and Kritzer bet 300,000.
Watson thought long and hard before calling with the for a counterfeited two pair that turns into queens and tens, and it was good as Kritzer showed a missed club flush draw.