Ramos Folds His Kings, But Cheung Doesn't Show
A player opened with a raise to 500 from early position. Action folded to Kinson Cheung who was on the button. He called. Felipe Ramos was in the small blind and he three-bet, making it 2,500 to go. Only Cheung called.
The flop came down and Ramos led out, betting 1,500. Cheung thought for a bit, then called.
On the turn, Ramos continued betting, this time making it 5,200. Cheung called once more.
The river was the and Ramos thought for a bit, then decided to check his option. Cheung thought for a while himself, then he moved all in for roughly 23,500, a bit more than Ramos had behind.
Eventually, Ramos started talking to Cheung, trying to figure out what he was holding.
"You don't have a lot of sevens," Ramos said. "You have more fives, like ace-five."
"I could have ace-seven," Cheung responded.
"Ace-seven would be a really bad call on the turn," Ramos said. "And you're a good player."
"It would've been a really bad call preflop," Cheung said jokingly, which earned a laugh from Ramos and some others.
Ramos eventually decided to fold, but held onto his cards. Cheung went to show, but didn't. Ramos asked if he would, but Cheung shook his head.
"Come on, one time," Ramos said, showing his . Cheung turned up his and that's all he would show Ramos. "Later then," Ramos requested.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Kinson Cheung | 42,500 | |
Felipe Ramos | 20,000 | |