With Level 24 coming to a close we are still yet to lose a single player on the final table. In fact the action has been very limited. Here are a few hands.
Nayoa Kihara raised to 84,000 in the cutoff and Chris De Maci called on the button. The flop was and a 155,000 Kihara bet won the pot.
Daniel Hindin raised to 50,000 from under the gun, Chris De Maci called in the cutoff as did Hans Winzeler in the big blind. The flop was and a 155,000 Hindin c-bet won the pot.
Lastly, Hans Winzeler raised to 48,000 on the button and Nayoa Kihara called in the big blind. The action checked through to the turn on a board of where Kihara bet 90,000 and Winzeler called. The river was the and this time Kihara checked. Winzeler took his time, bet 160,000 and it was enough to win the pot.
The action had been very slow for a couple of orbits. Very little playing back, and very little post flop action.
Davidi Kitai, for one, must've been getting a little board. Hence.....
He opened to 48,000 in the cut-off and Hans Winzeler three-bet to 133,000 from the next seat. Kitai checked his cards one more time and put in a pot-sized four-bet to 535,000.
Winzeler wasted little time in throwing his cards into the muck, only to be shown by the cheeky Belgian.
Daniel Hindin raised to 48,000 in the cutoff, Naoya Kiraha three-bet to 180,000 and it was enough to win the pot.
Hans Winzeler raised to 48,000 in first position, Kihara called in the cutoff as did both blinds. The flop was and Winzeler won the pot with a 105,000 c-bet.
Then Davidi Kitai won the next four hands in succession after uncontested 48,000 raises.
What a turnaround for Daniel Hindin! He just doubled through Naoya Kihara and over took him at the top of the counts.
The hand started with a Hans Winzeler button limp, a Hindin complete, and a check from Kihara in the big blind.
The flop fell and Kihara was the first to bet, for 70,000. Winzeler folded and Hindin raised the pot (282,000). Kihara found out that Hindin had 635,000 total and set him in for that amount. Call.
Hindin: for nut-flush and straight outs.
Kihara: for an over-pair and second nut-flush draw.
The turn came to make Hindin's flush. He still had to avoid full house outs and managed that as the river fell .
The chips are really evening up making this anyone's game now.
Chrid De Maci opened the pot to 42,000 from under the gun and was called by Tommy Le and Davidi Kitai from the next two seats.
All three checked the flop before De Maci led for 78,000 on the turn. Both opponents called again. All three thwn went back to their checking ways on the river.
De Maci opened and took the pot as Le and Kitai folded.
Naoya Kihara raised to 70,000 from first position and Davidi Kitai peeled from the button. The flop was and Kitai called a 155,000 Kihara c-bet. The turn card was the and this time Kihara decided a little bit of pot control was in order; he checked, Kitai bet 165,000 and Kihara called. The river card was checked through and it was time for a showdown.
Kihara
Kitai
Both players had straights, but Kihara's was slightly higher and he took down the pot.
We're at the official final table of six after the elimination of Scott Bohlman. Hans Winzeler came second in this event last year and he confirmed a return to the final table this year after it was he who busted Bohlman.
Bohlman raised to 70,000 from second position and Winzeler was the only caller to the flop.
Winzeler check-bet-pot after Bohlman bet pot himself. That was enough to set Bohlman all in. Call.
Bohlman:
Winzeler: for the flopped straight, and redraw to a flush.
Bohlman was in bad shape and he didn't improve through the turn and river.