One of the bigger pots without an all-in just occured between the two big stacks. Preflop Anthony Rodrigues raised to 120,000 and was three-bet by Mathieu Selides. Rodrigues called and then called Selides' bet of 240,000 on a board of . He then called another Selides bet on the turn and both players checked the river. Rodrigues showed and won the pot and in doing so opened up a slight gap between him and Selides in second place.
Meanwhile Correia shoved over Selides' open and got through. He has replaced Chergui as the resident short stack looking for that all important bubble to get back into contention
The crowd were on their feet around the table as all-in and call was announced by the tournament officials. Rodrigues had opened to 120,000 and Pinto had shoved from the big blind. Rodrigues made the call.
Pinto:
Rodrigues:
The flop made a chop very likely as it came , and the turn of the meant that a six or any card higher than a seven would mean a split pot for the pair, or a three for the outright win for Rodrigues knocking Pinto out. However the river came and the two split the pot
We said it was going to be a battle between these two to avoid being busted by the big stack. Mathieu Selides raised small to big and Pinto jammed. Selides made the call.
Pinto:
Selides:
Pinto was ahead and the flop was a safe one . However the threw a little tension into the air, with Selides now taking the lead but also opening the door to a split pot. However the river was the eliminating Pinto in third meaning we were now heads up between Selides and Rodrigues for €111,776 and a gold WSOP ring
They've done the maths and Anthony Rodrigues will be entering heads-up play with a more than 2:1 chip advantage over Mathieu Selides. As is customary there is a short break to reset the table and to organise the players ahead of heads-up play, and then we will play down to a winner!
Heads-up play has just gotten under way after the two players have posed for photos. The ring is out and early goings seem to have all the hallmarks of a long and protracted deepstacked heads-up match.
From the early stages of this heads-up battle it appears that Selides is the more comfortable. Rodrigues is mucking his cards in more and more an irritable fashion, and Selides has managed to pull back almost a million in chips from the Belgian.
Sometimes the most interesting hands don't have a showdown. Ok, that's a lie, but still they can be interesting.
Jonathan Rodrigues raised to 160,000, which has been the standard size so far. Selides pulled back his big blind and re-raised to 460,000. Rodrigues, not content with that pulled his bet back and made it 900,000. Selides then moved all-in and Rodrigues cursed, reluctantly letting go of his hand.