With a board reading and about 850,000 in the pot, Dannah Kamp bet 325,000 from the big blind and Chris Brewer thought about it from the hijack before ultimately calling.
Kamp showed for trips and Brewer mucked while mentioning he had a queen.
With cards on their backs, three players were all-in.
Jason Riesenberg:
Yeon Bae:
Michael Amato:
The flop and turn came out . "I still need a queen," said Riesenberg. The wish came true and the river landed a , giving Riesenberg the full triple, while Amato scooped the side and Bae left the tournament.
Anthony Ortega raised to 175,000 from early position and Elia Ahmadian jammed in his 1 million stack from the big blind. Ortega thought about it and ultimately called.
Elia Ahmadian:
Anthony Ortega:
The flop came to change nothing. However, the hit the turn to put Ortega out front, and the completed the board to make Ahmadian's elimination official.
Dannah Kamp raised under the-gun to 160,000 and action folded to Katsushi Yoshida in the small blind who went all-in for 825,000. Kamp thought for a short while before call.
Katsushi Yoshida:
Dannah Kamp:
The board ran out and Yoshida got the full double through Kamp.
Action picked up on the flop between James "Danny" Cook in the small blind and Bart Lybaert on the button. The flop read . "I'm gonna let you have at this one," Cook said as he checked the acton over to Lybaert.
Lybaert bet 150,000 which Cook responded to with a raise to 400,000. Lybaert thought briefly before he folded, giving Cook more to his over 5 million chip stack.
Dannah Kamp got the rest of her 1.1 million stack in against Jeffrey Vertes and the players saw they were flipping.
Dannah Kamp:
Jeffrey Vertes:
The flop was to give both players a piece of it but keep Kamp ahead. The turn provided a sweat, but the completed the board.
Kamp started to get up from her seat before suddenly sitting back down. "I didn't even see the eight!", she said. Kamp presumably only saw her opponent make a pair at first, but Kamp's set of eights were good to take down the pot and keep her tournament life alive.