Kristijonas Andrulis has just been eliminated after getting his stack of about 140,00 into the middle on a 


board. He tabled 
, but was drawing dead against the 
of Scott Abrams. The river was a meaning
and Abrams increased his stack to about 400,000.
2012 World Series of Poker
Lee Childs opened the betting with a raise to 11,000 only to have Stain Sinclair on the button make it 46,000 to go. It folded back to Childs who decided to four-bet the action, making it 86,000.
Sinclair asked how much Childs was playing before five-betting to 186,000. Childs folded his hand and informed Sinclair that he folded ace-king.
"One time?" Sinclair asked, showing 
. Childs heaved a sigh of relief as he learned that he made the the proper lay down.
Aaron Lim, who has been a participant in Onnit Labs' Last Sticker Standing Contest throughout the Main Event, got his stack of 112,000 all in preflop and was up against Ben Greenberg.
Showdown
| Lim | ![]() ![]() |
| Greenberg | ![]() ![]() |
It was a bad spot for Lim and he seemed to know his days were numbered as he stood from his chair and prepared to make his exit. The 

flop was about as dry as they come, while the
turn left Lim in need of a seven on the river. The dealer burned one last time and put out the
.
Just like that, Lim's 2012 World Series of Poker Main Event and chance at a $5,000 prize from the last longer bet came to an end.
Jamie Kerstetter moved all in preflop with her short stack and Filip Verboven called.
Kerstetter:

Verboven:

The board ran
and Kerstetter was eliminated.
Jeffery McAlister just open-pushed all in for 68,500 from middle position with 
and got one caller in Kosei Ichinose who had 
on the button.
The board came 



, and thanks to that river ten McAlister survived.
We caught up with the action on a 

flop, where Mike "Timex" McDonald was in a heads-up pot against Justin Shelton.
Mcdonald checked from the big blind and Shelton fired 12,000 into the middle from early position. McDonald called.
The turn brought the
and McDonald checked again. Shelton took his time, with McDonald fiercely studying him as he tanked, and fired 22,000 into the middle. McDonald again called.
The
completed the board and McDonald checked a final time. Undeterred, Shelton collected ten orange t5000 chips and pushed them into the middle for a 50,000 bet. McDonald folded rather quickly and rapped the table in acknowledgement.
McDonald slipped to 330,000 as a result of the hit.
Dane Lomas opened for 12,000, Dani Stern called and Jon Van Fleet moved all in for around 75,000 from the cutoff. Lomas folded and Stern called.
Van Fleet:

Stern:

The board ran
and Van Fleet doubled up to stay alive.
"They're moving fast!"
So said one staff member to another as they criss-crossed between the tables, noting how the bustouts are happening rapidly here during the first few minutes of Day 4. We're racing to that bubble.
Just now Thiago Nishijima was among the early eliminations, falling in a hand to Matthew Wolf. All in with his short stack with 
versus Wolf's 
, Nishijima's deuces were okay through the 

flop and
turn, but the
river gave Wolf a straight, sending Nishijima to the rail early.
We arrived over at Table 401 with Kyle Bowker and Rodger Johnson getting all the chips in on a 

flop. Johnson was the player at risk, being all in for around 115,000. This is how the player's hands looked at this point.
Bowker: ![]() ![]() |
Johnson: ![]() ![]() |
Bowker had plenty of outs to eliminate Johnson, but the
turn and the
river were safe and Johnson took the early double up.
Action folded around to Joshua Evans in the cutoff and he raised to 12,000. Anthony Guetti was next to act on the button and chose to move all in for right around 90,000. The blinds both got out of the way, and Evans made a hesitant call.
Showdown
| Guetti | ![]() ![]() |
| Evans | ![]() ![]() |
Guetti was behind and in need of some help, which he got on the 

flop. Unfortunately for him, the
spiked on the turn to pair Evans and give him the lead. The
river was of no consequence, and Guetti became an early elimination here on Day 4.

