Another round of seven tables are being moved from the Orange section of the Amazon room into the Pavilion room.
The Orange section is now down to just 12 tables as space continues to get cleared for Event #54 while simultaneously making this event easier to manage from the tournament directors viewpoint.
Kereshmeh Klangefeldt moved all in for her last sub 15,000 chips and her opponent told her, “I got them back to back.” before calling and turning over . Klangefeldt said she was dead and showed her but was reassured it wasn’t over yet.
The flop befuddled the whole table for a moment as the dealer put out [ fpr a set a piece. “You could still hit an eight.” came more unlikely reassurance, but the turn and river saw Klangefeldt eliminated.
Aram Oganyan face a bet of 6,700 on the turn of a board reading . He raised big enough to put his opponent all in and she sat quietly thinking about what to do. Suddenlu she started laughing and checked her cards again before making a seemingly reluctant fold saying. “Nice bluff.”
Another player said he had already folded a set. Oganyan said he wanted to show his cards to just her but the dealer pointed out that was not allowed so the mystery will have to remain.
Nine tables here in the Orange section of the Amazon room are being moved in conjunction into the Red section of the Brasilia room.
With the Orange section of the Amazon room normally reserved for the 4:00 p.m. tournaments, the Event #54: $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Low that is set to take place there has already been pushed back to a 6:00 p.m. start time.
With 20 tables already empty, more Monster Stack tables from the Orange section will have to be cleared as Event #54 is expecting to draw a decent showing of players looking to get there Omaha Hi-Low fix - the third last Omaha event of the series.
WSOP Circuit Killer and WPT title holder Dwyte Pilgrim loves a big field and a big stack.
He moved over the 100,000-chip mark just a few moments ago by making it 2,000 from the small blind after it folded to him. The big blind called, but when Pilgrim fired again, making it 2,200 after the flop, the big blind gave up.
When the player on his left made it 1,800 before the flop, Johnson called from the button. The flop came and both players checked. But when the turn presented itself, and his opponent checked, Johnson fired away, making it 4,400.
His heads-up opponent folded and Johnson crested the 40,000 chip mark