Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Martin Staszko |
124,750,000
-11,300,000
|
-11,300,000 |
Pius Heinz |
81,150,000
11,300,000
|
11,300,000 |
2011 World Series of Poker
Pius Heinz had the button, and he opened to 4.2 million. It was three-bet time for Martin Staszko again, and he made it 11 million total. Heinz shoved in for close to 70 million, and Staszko quietly folded.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Martin Staszko |
136,050,000
3,250,000
|
3,250,000 |
Pius Heinz |
69,850,000
-3,250,000
|
-3,250,000 |
Martin Staszko had the button and limped in. Pius Heinz checked and the flop came down . Heinz checked and Staszko bet 2.5 million. Heinz called.
The turn was the and both players checked to see the land on the river. Heinz checked and Staszko bet 5.25 million. After a minute, Heinz called.
Staszko showed the and Heinz mucked.
Pius Heinz raised to 4.2 million from the button, and Martin Staszko called to see the flop.
It came , and the Czech led out into the pot with 5 million of his own chips. Heinz was the one doing the calling now, and the turn brought them the . Staszko checked now, and Heinz checked it back to see the on the river. Check-check again.
Neither player could beat the board, and they chopped it up. We only caught a quick glimpse of the cards, but it looked like Staszko had flopped two pair with , and Heinz appeared to have or .
Martin Staszko had the button. He limped in and Pius Heinz raised to 6.5 million. Staszko called.
The two players took the flop with 13.6 million in the middle. Heinz was first and fired the same amount he raised to, 6.5 million. Staszko gave it up and Heinz won the pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Martin Staszko |
132,800,000
-21,600,000
|
-21,600,000 |
Pius Heinz |
73,100,000
21,600,000
|
21,600,000 |
Pius Heinz opened to 4 million on the button, and Martin Staszko defended his big blind. The flop came , and Heinz put another 4.5 million chips out there. Staszko check-raised to 10.2 million, though, and Heinz sat studying for about a minute. Then came the hammer -- all in for 54.3 million on a three-bet shove. Staszko has a habit of looking backward over his left shoulder when he's facing a big decision, and he spent some time doing just that before surrendering.
Heinz takes his fifth pot in a row, rebounding back up to 73.1 million.
Martin Staszko had the button. He limped in and Pius Heinz checked from the big blind to see the flop. Heinz bet out 2.5 million and Staszko called.
The landed on the turn and Heinz bet 5.7 million. Staszko folded.
Pius Heinz had the button, and his raise to 4 million won him the pot.