Steven Hensley in the small blind called a button raise of 4,600 and with the big blind out of the way it was to a heads up flop of . Hensley check-called a bet of 6,500 and they saw a turn card . Both players checked the river and when Hensley showed the , his opponent threw his in the air in exasperation.
There are plenty of small pots going back and forth right now around the tables, but it is Steven Hensley who consistently wants to play big pots with his stack able to knock players out proving a formidable weapon.
Raj Vohra had got to the turn of a board reading and Hensley checked it over to him. Vohra put out a bet and Hensley moved all in. Vohra thought about it, but in the end he laid it down to the aggression. The table wondered what Hensley had and if he would have called a raise preflop.
He raised and found a frisky Frank Debus willing to three-bet with a weak but suited ace. Vo raised again, but Debus made the call and when he picked up a flush draw on the flop, he put Vo to the test for all his chips.
Vo made the call for his tournament life and the jacks held on to push him over the 200k mark.
Sebastian Pauli looked up from the book he has been reading to raise from the small blind to 6,200. Raj Vohra made the call in the big blind. The two players saw a flop of .
Pauli continued for 6,500 and Vohra made the call. The turn card was the and Pauli continued the story with a bet of 11,500. Again, Vohra made the call. The river card was the . A third barrel of 30,000 from Pauli had Vohra looking at his remaining stack and making the fold.