The cards of Paul Volpe were all but mucked while the pot was pushed to Dario Sammartino. On a board of , the Italian had flopped a set and turned a flush draw to then river the nut flush with the to score the final blow on Volpe.
"King king seven deuce with two clubs," the dealer and two of the players on the table confirmed with regards to the hand of Volpe.
Jared Bleznick: / — folded on fifth street
Lyle Berman: /
Jared Bleznick completed and called a raise from Lyle Berman.
Berman bet on fourth street and Bleznick called. Bleznick check-folded on fifth street.
"Show me what you started with," said Bleznick and Berman showed in the hole.
"Wow I started better than you," said Bleznick who said he started with . "You know you have those guys you can never beat? [Lyle] is that guy for me."
Berman took a mock bow to the amusement of the tablemates.
Freddy Deeb raised from under the gun and was called three ways by Jen Harman on the button Yuri Dzivielevski in the small blind and Dylan Linde in the big blind. They all checked the flop and the turn. Dzivielevski bet the river and all opponents folded.
One hand later, Harman raised in the cutoff and called a three-bet by Dzivielevski on the button. The flop was checked by Harman and Dzivielevski bet to then snap-fold when Harman went for a check-raise.
The table no longer features Matt Glantz, who entered Day 2 as one of the shorter stacks.
Ryan Leng opened to 10,000 from under the gun. Bryn Kenney three-bet to 40,000 from the button and Leng called.
Both players drew one. Leng bet 100,000 and Kenney called.
Cary Katz had recently joined the field, and during this hand the table — including Leng — had been discussing Katz's now infamous stand pat all-in with a pair of fours at the $10,000 2-7 Single Draw Championship final table.
"I have Cary's hand," said Leng tabling with Kenney showing for the winner.
Jean-Robert Bellande bet on fifth street with an eight draw and then bet again sixth when he paired his ace, which sent Roy Thung into the tank. "Hey buddy, you are the one that raised," Bellande joked and Thung called a few seconds later.
Bellande also bet seventh street and Thung eventually paid it off to get shown a pair of aces with an eight-five low. Thung studied the cards carefully and mucked, mentioning he had an eight-six low as suspected by his table neighbour.