Martin Kabrhel had enjoyed a good start to the day, taking a pot off Andreas Zampas with a river shove to take down a 400,000 pot. In this hand he defended his big blind to a Michiel Brosky open and the pair saw a flop of .
Brosky checked and Kabrhel moved all in. Brosky snap-called and tabled . Kabrhel showed .
The turn was the and the river the , and an unusually quiet Martin Kabrhel counted out the double up for his opponent which leaves him on around as many chips as he started the day with.
It folded to Zoltan Ban in the small blind and he moved all in against [Removed:197] in the small blind who called.
Ban:
[Removed:198]:
[Removed:198] looked in good shape, but the three on a flop of gave Ban an unlikely lead. The turn was the but the river was the securing [Removed:198]'s double up early on Day 3.
In the first hand of the day Eric Lescot open-shoved for his remaining 275,000 chips. In the next position Jeremy Williams called. the remaining players all folded.
Lescot showed and Williams held . There was an Ace-high flop and Lescot was headed to the exit.
The final 27 players who have made Day 3 and are sat ready to battle the final levels separating them from the title, prize money, ring and a seat in the Global Casino Championship. So there's a lot at stake!
The blinds are currently 10,000/20,000 with a 3,000 ante. The average stack is just over 720,000 and the plan is simple - we play until there is one player remaining.
There is also a livestream available at the top of our page, which should be up and running on a short delay live from King's Casino
Stay tuned to PokerNews for the live coverage as we crown a winner.