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Martins Adeniya raised to 225 from under the gun, a player in the cutoff called, and Antonio Esfandiari three-bet to 600 on the button. Only Adeniya called.
The flop fell , and Adeniya check-called a bet of 800. Both players then checked when the turn brought the . The river was the , Adeniya led out for 1,375, and Esfandiari raised to 4,000. The Brit folded.
Josh Brikis, Darryl Fish, and a third player took a flop of . The action checked to the player on the button, who tossed out 1,000, and only Brikis called.
Brikis check-called another 1,600 on the turn, and an additional 3,000 on the river, and the player showed for a queen-high flush. Brikis mucked, dropping him down to 6,400 chips.
The Pittsburgh native doubled with pocket tens against an opponent's pocket eights not too long after, however, and is now back up to 13,000 chips.
A player raised to 200 from under the gun, Jennifer Tilly three-bet to 600 two spots to his left, and the action folded back to the original raiser, who called.
The dealer fanned , then the player check-called a bet of 600 from Tilly. The turn was the . Again, he check-called a bet of 1,000, and the completed the board.
The player checked one last time, Tilly tossed out two yellow T1,000 chips, and the player called the 2,000-chip bet.
Tilly turned over for a flopped set of sevens, and is now up to 19,000 chips.
When we arrived at Table 13, Joe Ebanks had a three-bet of 700 sitting in front of him in the small blind, and Darren Rabinowitz had two yellow T1,000 chips in front of him, signifying a four-bet to an amount between 1,025 and 2,000.
Ebanks, who won the $10,000 Six-Handed Championship at the 2011 WSOP, then five-bet to 4,700, Rabinowitz moved all in for effectively 13,725, and Ebanks snap-called.
Ebanks:
Rabinowitz:
The aces held up as the board rolled out , and Ebanks doubled to 27,525. Rabinowitz, a 2014 Aussie Millions finalist, was crippled to 1,700.