The pots don't grow too big with just nine players remaining and seven getting into the money. Most pots don't get past the flop right now.
2017 Aussie Millions
Seat | Player | Country | Chip Count |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Dzmitry Urbanovich | Poland | 250,000 |
2 | Jarrad Godema | Australia | 31,000 |
3 | Espen Solaas | Norway | 206,200 |
4 | Raj Ramakrishnan | Australia | 160,000 |
5 | Thomas Levine | United Kingdom | 111,000 |
6 | Allan Dabbajh | Australia | 92,000 |
7 | Daniel Demicki | Poland | 61,000 |
8 | Jonathan Abdellatif | Belgium | 53,000 |
9 | Gary Benson | Australia | 9,300 |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Dzmitry Urbanovich |
250,000
50,000
|
50,000 |
|
||
Espen Solaas |
206,200
46,200
|
46,200 |
Raj Ramakrishnan |
160,000
22,500
|
22,500 |
Thomas Levine |
111,000
2,000
|
2,000 |
Allan Dabbajh |
92,000
-1,200
|
-1,200 |
Daniel Demicki |
61,000
20,000
|
20,000 |
Jonathan Abdellatif |
53,000
-19,000
|
-19,000 |
Jarrad Godema
|
31,000
31,000
|
31,000 |
Gary Benson |
9,300
3,800
|
3,800 |
|
Level: 10
Blinds: 1,000/2,000
Ante: 0
The remaining nine players are on a 45-minute dinner break. We will get a full chip count and player list when play resumes.
Phil Laak got his last 49,500 chips in before the flop with . Dzmitry Urbanovich was the one looking him up with .
The flop came , giving Laak a flush draw. That never came to be, though, as the on the turn and on the river were blanks.
Laak exited in the last hand before the break.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Dzmitry Urbanovich |
200,000
50,000
|
50,000 |
|
||
Phil Laak | Busted | |
|
We caught the action on a flop of in a three-way pot between Andy Lee, Daniel Laidlaw (button) and Espen Solaas (small blind).
First to act, the player in middle position had led out for a pot-sized bet of 7,000 with Laidlaw making the call. Solaas nearly timed out but decided to re-pot for 39,300 with just seconds to spare on the shot clock.
The middle position player re-potted all-in for 62,500, Laidlaw called off his remaining 35,000 and Solaas called all in for 62,200.
The player in middle position had flopped gin with with Laidlaw on the club flush draw holding while Solaas held the dominated for middle set and an eight-high club draw.
In a cruel twist of fate, it was Solaas with the worst hand who improved to the best after hitting the runner, runner straight when the came down on the turn and the hit the river. Laidlaw headed for the exit and Lee was left crippled with just 300 left and busted shortly afterward.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Espen Solaas |
160,000
78,000
|
78,000 |
Daniel Laidlaw | Busted | |
Andy Lee | Busted |
Andy Lee got it in with against with the board running out to get down to 13 players.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Andy Lee | 27,000 |
Thomas Levine opened the action with a raise to 4,000 from the button and David Wang re-potted to 13,600 from the small blind before Raj Ramakrishnan re-potted from the big blind, making it 44,800 to go. Levine bowed out and Wang called off the rest of his stack.
David Wang:
Raj Ramakrishnan:
Wang's Kings were in front and stayed that way on the flop and stayed that way on the turn but the river saw Ramakrishnan hit trip queens to send Wang to the rail.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Raj Ramakrishnan |
137,500
12,500
|
12,500 |
Thomas Levine |
109,000
-4,000
|
-4,000 |
David Wang | Busted |
Espen Solaas opened to 4,000 from under the gun and action folded around to Sam Greenwood in the small blind who re-raised pot to 12,800, leaving himself around 15,000 behind.
Solaas made the call and Greenwood moved all in on the flop. Solaas called to put Greenwood at risk and the cards were turned over.
Sam Greenwood:
Espen Solaas:
Greenwood's aces were trailing to Solaas's flopped top two pairs and the turn and river ran out , respectively to send Greenwood to the exit and pad out Solaas's stack.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Espen Solaas |
82,000
49,000
|
49,000 |
Sam Greenwood | Busted | |
|
Level: 9
Blinds: 800/1,600
Ante: 0