Yuval Bronshtein completed over a Jeff Lisandro bring-in and both Matthew Ashton and Phil Ivey called as Lisandro folded. Bronshtein fired fourth, fifth and sixth streets with only Ivey calling him down until both players checked the river.
Bronshtein: (X-X) / / (X)
Ivey: (X-X) / / (X)
Bronshtein tabled his for a seven-six and scooped the pot once Ivey folded.
Jason, Donnie, and Rich celebrate National Doughnut Day and talk about final table railing, vuvuzelas, the recent bracelet winners, and more. They are then joined by RunGood Team Pro and WSOP bracelet winner Bryan Campanello to talk Texas high school football, grinding the live circuit, and more.
David Bach limped in and Tom Schneider completed with Brian Hastings making the call along with Bach. Schneider bet out 400 on fourth and Hastings raised to force Bach and Schneider to fold.
Entry is simple. For your chance to win this amazing prize all you have to do is share the contest on Twitter and Facebook via LockerDome. You can also earn entry by following PokerNews on Twitter and LockerDome, and liking us on Facebook. Earn an extra point by simply answering the poll question, “Which player will win the WSOP Main Event?” It’s an open question so there is no right or wrong answer.
The sweepstakes opened Monday, May 26 at 7 a.m. EDT and ends Thursday, June 26 at 7 p.m. EDT. Readers from all over the globe are eligible to win. A winner will be announced and notified July 6. You can view the official rules on the contest posted on the PokerNews LockerDome page.
When it comes to poker legends, Doyle Brunson stands above the rest. With 10 World Series of Poker gold bracelets and a pioneer in the game, the man they call "Tex Dolly" doesn't get to play much tournament poker these days because of the wear and tear that the long, strenuous days put on his body. Despite that, Brunson has made it out to the largest buy-in razz poker tournament ever held.
With $93,000 in live tournament earnings from razz-only events — which came from a bracelet victory in 1998 — Brunson is 29th on the WSOP's All-Time Razz Money List.
Now while Brunson may stay away from the Rio more so than he is in here playing day in and day out during the hot Vegas summer, the "Godfather of Poker" did manage a deep run in the last year's Main Event, finishing 409th out of 6,352 players. While that feat isn't quite as prominent as his two Main Event victories from 1976 and 1977, lasting several days in the most mentally and physically taxing poker tournament in the world at the age of 80 is one heck of an amazing accomplishment. Earning $28,063 isn't too bad, either.
He may not be able to play 30 or 40 events at the WSOP anymore, but it's a real treat to see such a living legend stay involved when he can — especially in the big buy-in tournaments that mean the most.