Action folded to Dennis Stevermer on the button who raised enough to force either of the blinds all in. The small blind called off while the big blind folded.
Small Blind Player:
Dennis Stevermer:
It was race but one that Stevermer pulled ahead in after the flop. The turn left his opponent drawing to just two outs but the river bricked out with the to keep Stevermer chipping up while sending the small blind player out of the tournament.
There was a mix of good news and bad news for Greg Margers at the end of this level.
On one hand, he raised all in for 77,000 on a flop of . His opponent in the big blind tanked for several minutes before the clock was called, eventually folding his hand as Margers stayed alive.
On the other, his son Tavish was eliminated a few minutes earlier. "Does that mean I won the bet," Margers said, raising his arms in the air as he took the Father's Day last longer bet but also expressing disappointment that his son had been knocked out.
The remaining players have been sent on their final 20-minute break of the day. They will return to blinds of 10,000/15,000 with a 15,000 big blind ante. At that point the field will play out three more 30-minute levels before the survivors bag for the night.
This summer, Golden Nugget Las Vegas will play host to the 14th Annual Grand Poker Series, which features 81 events and offers over $3 million in guaranteed prize money from May 31-July 3. One of those events is the $1,100 buy-in, $1,000,000 Guaranteed PokerNews Cup that will run from June 24-28.
The tournament will feature three starting flights beginning with Day 1a at 11 a.m. PT on Friday, June 24. Days 1b and 1c will take place at the same time on Saturday, June 25, and Sunday, June 26 respectively. The surviving players from each flight will return at Noon on Monday, June 27 to play down to the final table, which will play out at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, June 28.
PokerNews will be on-site throughout the duration to offer live updates, videos, social media content, and more.
An opponent moved all in for around 50,000 from middle position and Jordan Hufty called in the small blind.
All-In Player:
Jordan Hufty:
Hufty was dominated going to the flop which contained an also, but also a seven to give Hufty two pair. The board ran out and Hufty claimed another victim to climb above 1,000,000.
"You can't lose, can you," a tablemate said to the bracelet winner after the hand.
Jerry Wong, a former big stack at this table, is no longer in his seat and has been eliminated.
Grant Ellis moved all in for 75,000 on the button and a player under the gun called.
Grant Ellis:
Under-the-Gun Player:
Ellis was ahead but his opponent picked up several outs on the flop, giving him a straight flush draw. He bricked the turn and the river as Ellis held on to win the pot with his ace-kicker and double up.
"You dodged the world, there," a tablemate said.
The next hand, Ellis would win the blinds and antes with a raise to climb above 200,000.
Alexis Gilbard moved all in from under the gun and was called by Jim Aman one seat over. The remaining players folded and Gilbard was officially at risk.
Alexis Gilbard:
Jim Aman:
Aman was well ahead and poised to get the knockout. The changed nothing, as Aman had both of Gilbard's suits covered. The turn and river could not provide Gilbard with the jack she had spiked on the river earlier to eliminate an opponent, ending her run late on Day 1.