With plenty of chips already in the middle, Nick Pupillo called the shove of a shorter stack for 145,000 on the and was shown the for the nut straight and flush draw. Pupillo only held and the river was a mere formality.
Despite losing this pot, Pupillo still sits on a very healthy stack.
Robert Zipf raised to 35,000 and then four-bet all in for 225,000 when facing a three-bet to 75,000. His opponent called with and Zipf was miles ahead with the . The board came and Zipf doubled.
Charles Moore is sat with one of the biggest stacks in the competition on his direct left. He didn't let that stop him from getting it in just now.
It began with an under the gun open from Yi Ma and everyone folded until it came to Moore, who defended his big blind. The flop was the and Moore didn't waste any time moving all in. Ma asked for a count and showed before he threw them into the muck.
There are several big stacks moving ahead of the pack but with two and a half levels left of the night, there is still plenty of time for it to change at the top.
Kamel Atoui was all in with the and faced an overpair in . The board came and that spelled the end for the Frenchman.
Some further assorted counts from Pavilion can be found below as the last few tables are about to break and eventually unite the entire remaining field in one room.
As the last two dozen tables in Pavilion break, three big stacks with more than one million in chips were or are about to be moved to Brasilia and their stack sizes can be found below.
Dylan Wilkerson defended his small blind against a raise and check-called a bet of 20,000 on the flop before doing so again for 45,000 on the turn. The on the river was checked and Wilkerson tabled the , which won the pot.