The flop was and small blind Philipp Gruissem checked it over to Chis Da Silva who bet 2,500. Gruissem called and they both checked the turn .
The river was the and a check from Gruissem saw Da Silva take his time before betting a chunky 11,000. Off came the headphones and Gruissem was left scratching his head, vocally wondering if Da Silva could have Jacks? There was a bit of back and forth between the two players before Gruissem called.
Da Silva was bluffing with and as most of the table had guessed Gruissem showed . Da Silva argued that it was a snap call but Gruissem disagreed. There followed a brief, slightly heated, discussion on the nature of reality and perception but no firm conclusions were agreed upon.
Niall Farrell check-called a bet from Adrian Smith on a flop of .
The turn card was the and Farrell checked again to Smith who bet 2,500. Farrell sprang the check raise to 6,700. When Smith asked to see his stack he saw there was around 10,000 behind.
A quick look back at his cards before they headed to the muck and Farrell picked up a decent pot without showdown.
His opponent, Tony Blanchandin, had bet 10,000 which was close to pot sized. The dilemma for Ramos seemed to be that he had a good hand but only 22,000 left in his stack.
Ramos tried to get a read off his opponent but Blanchandin was calmly riffling his chips. About 5 minutes went by before chuckled to himself as he folded his cards to fight on another hand.