Anthony Arvidson raised and got calls from Scott Milkey on the button and Christopher Sensoli in the small blind. Everyone drew two, which Sensoli deemed fair. Everyone checked following the draw, and it went one, one, two with only Milkey still needing a couple of cards. Arvidson bet after that, and only Sensoli called.
Sensoli drew and Arvidson patted. Sensoli check-called a bet, and Arvidson showed for a six-low and a three-card four-badugi. Sensoli had so they chopped the badugi, giving three-quarters to Arvidson.
Wook Kim limped in from under the gun and Kevin Iacofano raised to 30,000. Anthony Arvidson called in the cutoff, as did Christopher Sensoli from the big blind, and Kim.
Each player drew two and checked around before everyone drew two apart from Kim who drew one and bet out 30,000.
Iacofano called, as did Arvidson before they each drew one after Kim stood pat.
Kim checked, Iacofano bet 30,000, Arvidson folded and Kim called.
Kim tabled his and Iacofano tabled his to see the pot chopped up.
On the rare bring-in, Kevin Iacofano completed with a first to act and saw Scott Milkey make it two bets from two seats down with . Everyon else mucked and Iacofano called, catching the while Milkey caught bad with . Iacofano bet and Milkey called, but Milkey caught good and Iacofano bad on fifth.
Milkey: /
Iacofano: /
"Worst card for me, best card for you," Iacofano mused as he mucked.
Milkey showed .
"If I knew you had one-two-three, I'd probably call," Iacofano said with a chuckle. "That never wins."
Christopher Sensoli had the bring-in and Kevin Iacofano completed to 15,000. Sensoli defended and then called bets on fourth and fifth street before eventually folding on sixth to an Iacofano 30,000-chip bet.
David Bach opened to 20,000 and, with the action on Chip Jett on the button, he moved all in for his last 72,000. The blinds folded and Bach called.
Bach:
Jett:
The dealer spread a flop to see Bach flop a flush and the nut low as Jett would need a six or five to stay alive.
The on the turn changed little and, when the completed the board on the river, Jett was eliminated in seventh place for a $10,779 payday as Bach moved over 1.2 million in chips.
David Bach opened for 20,000 on the button and called a three-bet to 64,000 from big blind Chip Jett. The flop came and they got the rest in for Jett's remaining 85,000.
Jett:
Bach:
Bach had a hammerlock with trips on the high end and a likely chop on low, and the turn and river bore that out, giving him three-quarters.