There was an early position open to 50,000, Aylar Lie three-bet to 150,000, and Jimmy D'Ambrosio four-bet shoved for about 600,000. The original raiser folded and Lie called all-in for less.
Aylar Lie:
Jimmy D'Ambrosio:
Lie was drawing thin as the hit the flop and the turn sealed the deal for D'Ambrosio with a set of kings as the hit the river.
D'Ambrosio soars up the leaderboard as one of the late-night leaders.
From the button, Roberto Bendeck was able to successfully put all 366,600 of his chips into the middle with pocket aces against his late-position opponent.
Roberto Bendeck:
Late Position:
The was pretty clean for Bendeck and the turn gave his opponent just two outs.
A on the river gave Bendeck a full double-up worth roughly 750,000.
An early position player raised to 28,000 and both Jimmy D'Ambrosio and the big blind came along.
The flop was , the big blind checked and the original raiser bet 37,000. Only D'Ambrosio called.
On the turn , the early position player check-called a bet of 27,000 from D'Ambrosio.
Things got interesting on the river to put four hearts out there. The early position player sized up to 70,000 and sent D'Ambrosio deep into the tank.
D'Ambrosio gave his opponent an intense staredown before starting his patented table talk.
"Blocker bet, right?" he inquired, to no response from his opponent.
"If I put you all in would you get excited or would you shift in your seat?" asked D'Ambrosio.
"Let me see your throat," he said next, as his opponent humored him.
Finally, D'Ambrosio settled on a call and his opponent tabled for top pair. D'Ambrosio had that beat though with his for a straight and picked up a nice pot.
With 90,000 already in the middle, the flop came .
Yan Shing Tsang, who was under the gun, put in a bet of 20,000 and Jimmy D'Ambrosio min-clicked it up to 40,000.
After the big blind folded, Tsang clicked it back to 70,000 with only 45,000 behind. D'Ambrosio was puzzled by the "weird click" and contemplated his decision for about two minutes before putting Tsang all-in, admitting he would "definitely need some help." Tsang called.
Yan Shing Tsang:
Jimmy D'Ambrosio:
The was no help for D'Ambrosio and neither was the river , which allowed Tsang to double up and take his chip stack to 300,000.