With the board showing on the turn, Walter Browne bets 40,000, James Richburg raises to 80,000, Browne reraises to 120,000, Richburg reraises to 160,000, and Browne calls. It's a huge pot.
The river card is the , and both players check. (There can be no lows on this board.)
Richburg shows for trip threes, but Browne shows to win the pot with a full house, kings full of threes.
There's an odd quirk at this table, because James Richburg has been hoarding the dark green (25,000) chips most of the night. Now that Browne has been eating into his stack, he's left with mostly green chips. Meanwhile, Browne has all the yellow (1,000) and pink (5,000) chips.
It almost looks like they're playing in two different events, or at least at two different blind/ante levels.
(Omaha Hi-Lo) With the board showing on the turn, James Richburg bets 40,000, Walter Browne raises to 80,000, and Richburg calls. The river card is the , Richburg checks, Browne bets 40,000, and Richburg thinks for about 15 seconds before he folds. Browne takes the pot.
The final two players take a break to discuss the possibility of a deal, asking for a copy of the payout structure for the top two spots. Here are the official chip counts:
James Richburg - 1,273,000
Walter Browne - 637,000
James Richburg raises from the button to 40,000, Walter Browne reraises from the small blind to 60,000, Chris Bjorin moves all in from the big blind for 43,000, and Richburg calls the raise.
The flop comes , Browne bets 20,000, Richburg raises to 40,000, and Browne calls. The turn card is the , Browne checks, Richburg bets 40,000, and Browne folds. Richburg takes the side pot, and he and Bjorin show their cards:
James Richburg:
Chris Bjorin:
Richburg has the lead with a pair of deuces, and Browne claims he folded an ace with a higher (unpaired) kicker. Bjorin needs a jack or a ten on the river to stay alive, but the last card is the .
Chris Bjorin is eliminated in third place, earning $83,467.