Kyle Dilschneider raised on the button and Jonathan Cohen called. Cohen checked on the flop and his opponent checked back. Cohen checked again on the turn and called a bet from Dilschneider.
Cohen checked again on the river and called another bet from Dilschneider, who showed to win the pot with second pair.
Jonathan Cohen opened and called a three-bet from Kyle Dilschneider. Dilschneider bet on the flop and Cohen called. Dilschneider checked on the turn and called a bet from his opponent.
Dilschneider again check-called on the river and mucked when Cohen showed for a rivered two pair.
"You needed it," Dilschneider said about the river, claiming he had an overpair.
"You're good enough to check with an overpair?!" yelled Cohen's friend on the rail. "You know we don't believe that bullshit!"
Jonathan Cohen opened on the button and Kyle Dilschneider called. Dilschneider checked on the flop and called a bet from his opponent. The same action took place on the turn.
The river checked through and Dilschneider showed to with the pot with a pair of nines.
The two remaining players have agreed to end play for the day and will return Wednesday, June 15 at 3 p.m. local time to finish the tournament. Stay tuned for a recap of the day's events.
Day 3 of Event #26: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) at Bally's and Paris Las Vegas has wrapped up after over 11 hours of play with only two players remaining. Kyle Dilschneider and Jonathan Cohen, who are both after their first bracelets, agreed to end play for the day and will return on Wednesday, June 15 at 3 p.m. PDT to finish the tournament.
The two battled heads-up on Day 3 for more than two hours, and by the end of it, Dilschneider had a slight chip lead over Cohen with a stack of 3,000,000 compared to the 2,500,000 of Cohen.
Event #26: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship Final Table Results So Far
PLACE
PLAYER
COUNTRY
PRIZE (IN USD)
3
Matthew Schreiber
United States
$107,978
4
Matthew Gonzales
United States
$78,435
5
Joey Couden
United States
$58,226
6
Chad Eveslage
United States
$44,194
7
Matt Woodward
United States
$34,314
8
Amir Shayesteh
United States
$27,269
9
David Litt
United States
$22,192
The day began with nine hopefuls and slowly dwindled down, with David Litt being the first to go in a cooler where his trips were no good against the straight of Joey Couden, who himself later bowed out in fifth place.
Day 2 chip leader Chad Eveslage bowed out in fifth in brutal fashion when he made a full house only to be counterfeited by quads on the board to lose to the ace-high of Cohen.
Matthew Schreiber was down to just a few big bets during six-handed play but managed to run up his stack and ladder to third place, falling when he got it in with middle pair to be drawing thin against the two pair of Cohen.
Dilschneider is after his first big tournament score, while Cohen has his eyes dead-set on the bracelet after being denied one when he finished runner-up in Event #14: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em Shootout at the 2012 WSOP for $192,559.
The PokerNews live reporting team will be back on June 15 to see the heads-up battle play out.