Sliman Taghzouit made it 125,000 to go from the button and Alexandre Luneau three-bet out of the small blind to 350,000. Taghzouit called but surrendered on the flop to a bet of 200,000.
Taghzouit was not one to give up and made it 125,000 the very next hand. This time Luneau only called and called another 225,000 on the flop. The turn prompted a bet of 375,000 from Taghzouit, and yet again Luneau made the call.
Taghzouit emptied the clip on the river, and Luneau thought only briefly about calling the 1,250,000 before his cards found the way into the muck.
The Spanish player with the pseudonym Cano is out in 26th place as he got his last million chips in with against the of Mounim Kaddouri. The coin flip would go the way of the Frenchman, as the board ran out , and Kaddouri scooped the pot.
Just moments before Clement Genon-Catalot was eliminated on an adjacent table, and that leaves 25 players still in the running for the 1,000,000 MAD first prize.
Karim Benamrouche made it 120,000 to go from the cutoff, Hugo Larachiche reraised to 350,000 on the button before Rakesh Lalwani in the small blind moved all-in for 1,250,000. Benamrouche committed his 925,000 chips, and the action was back on Larachiche, who didn't look overjoyed with the prospect of either calling or folding. Ultimately Larachiche folded face up, and that was a good one at that as Lalwani turned over and Benamrouche tabled .
The flop was best for Lalwani, and the on the turn sealed the deal for the Indian. The river gave Lalwani quads for good measure, and Lalwani surged to the better half of the leaderboard.
It's said that the higher you climb, the further you fall, and let me tell you, Kevin Droz just fell far. First he got into the biggest pot of the tournament against Ivan Deyra, when he five-bet to 800,000 and called it off for another million against Deyra's . That cost him 1,800,000, and the very next hand his remaining 10 big blinds were in the middle as well with against the of Bruno Soutavong. The board ran out , and Droz hit the rail.
Shortly after Nicolas Mayot and Benjamin Truzman were out of chips as well, and that leaves 30 players still in contention for the trophy. The next player out receives 26,000 MAD (€2,400) while every other player will take home at least 32,000 MAD (€2,900).
Kazuma Fujiyama made it 90,000 to go from the cutoff and only Alexandre Luneau defended his big blind. Fujiyama continued for 120,000 on the flop and Luneau made the call. Both players checked through the turn, and the same thing happened on the river.
Luneau turned over for the backdoored full house, and by the looks of it, that was more than enough to drag the pot.
Clement Genon-Catalot shoved hist last 555,000 from the cutoff, Guillaume Dupuy made the call in the small blind before Mickael Muselli moved all-in over the top for another 450,000 out of the big blind. Dupuy called, and hands were on their backs.
Genon-Catalot:
Muselli:
Dupuy:
Muselli was looking good to scoop a monster pot, but when the dealer put two pair, eights and tens, on the board, the pot was chopped threeway.
... Oh, and by the way. Not everyone loves a chop-pot. Muselli looked quite disappointed afterward.