Tom Hu opened the action with a raise to 350,000 in the cutoff to get called by Thair Kallabat on the button and Michael Duek in the big blind. The flop brought and Duek bet 450,000 to force two folds.
Shiva Dudani then raised to 350,000 on the button and Duek raised the pot to take it down.
Duek raised on the button to win the blinds.
Dudani then raised to 350,000 once more and Duek potted from one seat over to claim the next pot uncontested.
Joachim Haraldstad raised to 300,000 in the hijack and Tom Hu then reraised the pot to 1,080,000 on the button. The reluctant call by Haraldstad followed and the flop came and Haraldstad checked before folding when Hu bet 700,000.
Shiva Dudani has sent the final five players home for the night and extended his now massive chip lead with the elimination of Thair Kallabat.
Kallabat opened to 350,000 from the button and was met with a pot-sized three-bet to 1,170,000 by Dudani.
Kallabat came back with a pot-sized four-bet to 3,630,000, leaving himself approximately 1,700,000 behind.
Dudani opted to just call, but after a flop of , Kallabat stuck the rest of it in and was instantly called.
Thair Kallabat:
Shiva Dudani:
Kallabat was actually well ahead with his aces, flush draw and gutshot Broadway draw, while Dudani's red cards had only second pair and his own gutshot Broadway draw, partially blocked by Kallabat's ten.
The turn changed nothing, but one of those three remaining tens magically fell on the river with the to eliminate Kallabat and end the night with Dudani well in the chip lead as those final five players bag up for the night.
The five finalists will be back at 2pm local time on Tuesday, July 5, 2022 and determine the winner of the record-breaking WSOP $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship.
After a fast-paced day with bursts of lightning-quick eliminations, just five players remain to vie for the title in WSOP Event #69: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship (8-Handed).
The man to beat will be two-time WSOP Circuit ring winner Shiva Dudani of Chicago, Illinois, who lit the tournament on fire after dinner, winning the two largest pots of the event to first take the chip lead, and then solidify it to bring 15,650,000 into Tuesday’s Day 4.
Michael Duek will go in with the second-most chips (9,405,000), while Tom Hu, who had the chip lead for much of the evening until he lost a huge pot to Dudani, comes in third with 7,330,000.
Tuesday’s final five will be playing for the $1,246,770 top prize and one of the most prestigious of World Series of Poker bracelets available.
Seat Assignments for the Final Day
Seat
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Joachim Haraldstad
Norway
3,580,000
30
2
Sean Troha
United States
5,045,000
42
3
Tom Hu
United States
7,330,000
61
4
Shiva Dudani
United States
15,650,000
130
5
Michael Duek
Argentina
9,405,000
78
Day 3 Recap
The day began with 39 contestants, but that field was quickly whittled down by the first break with nine players sent to the rail, and not long after that the field was down to the three-table redraw with Duek’s elimination of Tommi Lankinen that saw him move up the leaderboard early in the day.
The next round of eliminations that led up to the dinner break included several notables, including Brandon Adams (24th), Jeff Madsen (19th), and David Coleman (17th).
Post-Dinner Bustout Bonanza
The PokerNews reporting team was unsure of what the final 12 players had for dinner, but whatever they ate inspired them to come out blasting their stacks, with double-ups and eliminations in quick succession, leading to a final table within an hour.
As mentioned, Hu had built up a healthy chip lead until Dudani doubled through him, then eliminated Thair Kallabat in a pair of ten million chip pots to wrap up Day 3 play before midnight.
Final Table Results and Remaining Payouts
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (in USD)
1
$1,246,770
2
$770,556
3
$548,015
4
$395,465
5
$289,630
6
Thair Kallabat
United States
$215,326
7
Nitesh Rawtani
United States
$162,542
8
Toby Lewis
United Kingdom
$124,611
A Champion Will Be Crowned Tuesday
Play will resume Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Bally’s Event Center with 11:09 remaining in Level 28 (blinds 60,000/ 120,000/ 120,000 big blind ante).
The final five will play down to a winner and the PokerNews live reporting team will be there for all the action as the largest PLO Championship event in the history of the World Series of Poker determines a champion.
Stay tuned for all the excitement from this and every event from the 53rd World Series of Poker from its new home at Bally’s and Paris Las Vegas.