Action was on the flop reading in a blind on blind battle as David Cabrera had bet 1,200,000 from the big blind. George Holmes raised him from the small blind to 4,000,000. Cabrera then three-bet all in for what was counted out to be 6,910,000. Holmes thought for about 30 seconds before he called.
Cabrera quickly tabled the and Holmes tossed over the with some disgust.
The turn was the and the river came the to give the Spaniard the massive double and to wound Holmes.
Ramon Colillas defended the big blind against a raise by Lewis Spencer and both opted to check the flop. On the turn, Colillas check-called a bet worth 390,000 and checked again the on the river. Spencer now bet 1,200,000 and earned a call by the Spaniard to reveal the as the winning hand.
Tyler Cornell opened to 350,000 from under the gun and was called by Alejandro Lococo in the hijack. The two players went heads-up to a flop of .
Cornell checked to Lococo who bet 325,000 and Cornell check-raised to 1,100,000. Lococo called and the rolled off on the turn. Cornell checked again and Lococo checked back to see the on the river.
Cornell checked once more and Lococo dropped in a bet of 2,000,000. Cornell thought for a couple of minutes but decided to send his cards to the muck.
George Holmes raised in early position, Nick Petrangelo jammed all in from the button for his remaining stack of just over fifteen big blinds and Holmes called.
Nick Petrangelo:
George Holmes:
Petrangelo was in big trouble as he would need to find a queen to survive. The flop came to miss him. The turn was the . But the dealer procured the on the river to save his tournament life and give the stellar pro another wind deep into Day 6.
Chase Bianchi had raised from the early position and Nicolas Dumont defended his big blind.
The flop came , Dumont check-called a continuation-bet of Bianchi to see the on the turn.
They both checked through it for the to complete the board. Dumont fired a bet of 725,000 for Bianchi to raise it up to 2,200,000. Dumont tanked for a while and then called but mucked when Bianchi tabled the for the rivered straight.
Nicholas Rigby raised to 355,000 and Jareth East three-bet to 2,840,000, enough to cover Rigby. Rigby tanked for several minutes before calling to put his tournament life at risk.
Nicholas Rigby:
Jareth East:
The board ran out and East's ace held to end Rigby's Main Event adventure.
The old adage "A Chip and a Chair" seems to ring true for Matija Dobric, who once again found himself all in and at risk, this time for 1,650,000. This time, it was Adam Walton who was trying to knock the Croatian out.
Matija Dobric:
Adam Walton:
The board came down and Dobric vaulted out of his chair to run through his rail. His cheers loudly echoed throughout the Amazon Room as he continues his comeback from a mere big blind.
The 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event will be broadcast live on PokerGO each and everyday now through November 17. The daily live stream coverage of the 2021 WSOP Main Event will conclude with a world champion being crowned on Wednesday, November 17.
“The World Series of Poker Main Event is the greatest poker tournament in the world, and that is why we are so very proud to deliver start-to-finish live coverage of the WSOP Main Event on PokerGO for the first time ever,” said Mori Eskandani, President of PokerGO. “PokerGO looks forward to broadcasting another outstanding chapter in poker history through our live coverage of the 2021 WSOP Main Event. The 2021 WSOP bracelet events have truly been ones to remember, and more history will be made with the crowning of a new world champion.”
Remember, poker fans can catch live updates from every single bracelet event from start to finish right here on PokerNews. Make sure to bookmark the 2021 World Series of Poker Hub, with all the reporting, news, interviews, and more from Las Vegas.
If you’re not currently subscribed to PokerGo, you can get a monthly subscription for $14.99, a three-month plan for $29.99, and an annual subscription for $99.99. You can also save $10 off an annual subscription by using promo code “PokerNews” at checkout. Click here to subscribe.
Jon Shoreman moved all-in from the cutoff and was called by Hye Park from the button.
Jon Shoreman:
Hye Park:
Both players hit their kicker on the flop and it was Park who prevailed on the turn and river runout.
Shortly after, Gabriel Sack jammed for 1,740,000 and it was Park once more who called by placing one of the yellow one million chips in front of his stack.
Gabriel Sack:
Hye Park:
The flop left Sack in desperate shape and he was drawing dead on the turn, the river was a mere formality. Park earned knockouts with ace-king in consecutive hands to further increase his stack.