Tristan Wade's Little One for One Drop was short and not so sweet and he is now heading out of the Brasilia Room.
Wade got his chips in during a blind-versus-blind situation and had very much the best of it, his crushing the of his opponent. The flop kept Wade in front, but the on the turn left him drawing to the two remaining kings in the deck. The on the turn wasn't one of them and Wade busted.
Ludovic Geilich has turned in 4,000 starting stack into a huge pile worth 14,000. The hyper aggressive Scottish pro could end the day with a six-figure stack or he could be gone before the end of the next level.
"I'm on my third bullet," Brian Pinkus told us as we passed by his table. "I'm going to go all Daniel Negreanu and enter like 40 times," Pinkus continued, referring to Negreanu's strategy in prior years when low-buy-in reentry tournaments were more prevalent at the WSOP.
Asi Moshe may have won a bracelet a few days ago, but he won't be completing in the Little One for One Drop.
Moshe held and his opponent . An ace on the flop left Moshe drawing thin, but a king on the turn gave him a glimmer of hope. However, a on the river only rubbed salt into Moshe's wound and he headed for the exits.
A player raised to 400 from early position and it was called by another opponent and Jennifer Tilly from the small blind. The flop was and the original raiser bet 600. His second opponent folded, but Tilly called. The turn was the and Tilly checked. Her opponent bet 1,000 and she raised to 3,000.
After getting a count, Tilly's opponent moved all in and Tilly quickly called, tabling . Her set was ahead of the of her opponent and her hand held after the fell on the river.
David Williams joins the PokerNews Podcast before the start of Day 3 of Event #59 to discuss Daniel Colman winning the BIG ONE for ONE DROP, his disregard for the media, and more. Jason, Donnie, and Rich continue the discussion in the second half of the show, and also talk about the "dispute" that lead to the Macau-based players skipping the $1 million tournament.
Ralph Massey was heads-up against an all in player and had the best of it with versus . The flop was and Massey stayed safe, but the turn paired his opponent.
A fourth heart came though with the river and Massey's flush was good to bust a player and increase his stack.