Dominic Mahoney is the latest elimination, he was all in with against Jonathan Slater's and couldn't dodge all the outs that the flop brought. The came on the turn to put Slater ahead and the river made no difference.
Jack Young moved all-in for 228,000 and Benjamin Spragg called with . Young showed .
The cards fell . The last card gave Young the straight. “I had to lose one.” said Spragg taking it on the chin, but that was a massive dent to his stack.
Max Silver has knocked out [Removed:28], the latter making a move with on a flop. Silver was holding and and avoided diamonds on the turn and river to leave us with 24 players remaining.
A couple of hands later Dara “Mongoose” Davey called the all-in of Dimitri Pembroke. Pembroke had , Davey again had . The board came out and Davey lost what he had just won.
After Raul "El Toro" Paez opened for 32,000 from the hijack, Day 1b chip leader Damian Porebski moved all in from the button for 214,000. The blinds folded and action was back on Paez, who has developed a reputation as consistently taking a long time to act. This hand would be no different.
Paez stood, asked for a count and then put together enough chips to call if he so chose. The process took several minutes, and that's when Paez began to ask his opponent whether or not he wanted a call. After another minute or so, Max Silver decided to call the clock. The floor was called over and soon after Paez showed the and folded.
"Five minutes," Silver scolded. "There's no reason. If you're gonna call, then call. You're wasting time."
Paez seemed surprised that the table was growing impatient with him.
Peter Murphy opened the betting for 45,000 and was called on the button by Euan Cameron. The blinds left them to it. The flop was and Murphy continued for 38,000. Cameron called. A {6c] on the turn and Murphy increased the price to 88,000 only to be called again by murphy. The final card was the . Murphy bet a chunky 218,000.
Cameron took his time, working through the hand and finally decided to make the call. He mucked when he saw that Murphy had flopped a set with
Dino Sabatini opened with a raise and Jonathan Slater flatted. When action reached a short-stacked Tony Martin in the big blind, he shoved all in and Sabatini came along. Slater got out of the way and Martin was in a bad spot.
Martin:
Sabatini:
Martin had a big hand, but Sabatini's was better. The board ran out an uneventful and Martin made a beeline out of the feature table area.