Florian Langmann raised to 55,000 in the cutoff, and Jonathan Depa got his 36,000 in from the small blind. Zach Freeman called in the big blind before folding to 50,000 on the flop.
Langmann:
Depa:
The flop was nothing of substance for either besides a gutshot for Depa. A turn and river meant Langmann had run the nut flush, and he finally knocked out the stubborn Depa.
Jonathan Depa was down to 3,000 chips a bit ago, a quarter of the small blind. Now, he still only has 24,000, but he at least has a fighting chance.
First he got it all in with and made jacks full to take the high end on a board against Florian Langmann and Dylan Wilkerson.
Then, Langmann raised to 55,000, and Depa put his last 7,000 in, with Doug Baughman calling in the big blind. Baughman mucked to a flop bet after hit the board, and Depa turned over . He had a straight draw against Langmann's for a pair of nines, and a turn and river meant Depa had a higher straight to take the pot.
After doubling up Dylan Wilkerson in a preflop all in pot, Shiva Dudani was down to 116,000. He potted from late position and got set all in by TJ Eisenman.
Dudani:
Eisenman:
Eisenman's aces stayed good, making a full house on the board and eliminating Dudani from contention.
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Dylan Wilkerson raised to 55,000 from late position, and Jonathan Depa moved in for 185,000 from the small blind. Zach Freeman shipped in as well from the big blind for 294,000. Wilkerson called.
Wilkerson:
Depa:
Freeman:
Everyone had ace-deuce, so it was down to suits and secondary cards. The board came , and Freeman tripled up with the nut straight. Wilkerson won a small side pot with a pair of kings.
Shortly after doubling up Zach Freeman, Florian Langmann just lost another all-in pot, this time to Jonathan Depa.
The two got it in after a flop, with Langmann holding for a nut low draw, while Depa had a mere pair of threes with . Amazingly, the threes held for the whole pot as the hit the turn and the river.
Jonathan Depa got it all in before the flop against Doug Baughman.
Baughman:
Depa:
The board came , meaning Baughman quartered Depa by taking the high with aces and splitting the low, as both played .
Two hands later, Depa raised to 70,000, nearly all of his chips, and Zach Freeman put him all in for his remaining 14,000.
Freeman:
Depa:
Depa had a rainbow hand but there was some value there with for low and for high, both ahead of Freeman. Depa's equity was realized as the board came , giving him a straight to the six with a nut low.
As notable hands continue to be few and far between, we decided to highlight one of the final table participants battling here today at Event #54 of the 2014 World Series of Poker.
Dylan Wilkerson is a name that might not be familiar to most, but he has found his share of success as a well-traveled grinder on the tournament circuit. He's scored past cashes in a wide variety of countries, including Australia, France, Spain, England, Bahamas, Canada, and of course his home country: United States.
Wilkerson's total tournament cashes in live settings add up to just over $1.3 million, and he's already booked a cash well over the roughly $300,000 that will be given for first here. However, he's still looking for his first major win as his two biggest cashes were both bittersweet silver medal efforts this past spring: $228,364 at CPT Fallsview Classic Main Event and $728,650 at WPT Bay 101 Shooting Stars.
We'll continue to monitor the San Francisco native's progress as he attempts to take down this final table.