Matt Glantz raised and David Williams called. The remainder of the table decided to let the two battle it out. The flop came and Glantz checked. Williams bet and Glantz put in a raise. Williams made the call.
The turn was the and Glantz bet. Williams called.
The river was the and Glantz bet again. Williams called.
Glantz turned over for aces and sixes and Williams mucked his hand, left with just 46,000 after the hand. Glantz in the meantime moved up to 374,000 in chips.
Michael Bees raised in middle position, Joe Mitchell called on the button, and the two took a flop of . Bees led out for a bet, Mitchell called, and the turn was the .
Bees slowed down, checking, and Mitchell took the opportunity to bet. Bees called.
The river was the , both players checked, and Bees took the pot with for a flush.
Michael Bees limped in from early position and the action was on Matt Glantz. He paused for a moment and someone on the rail yelled "take a chance, Glantz!" which prompted a chuckle from a number of players at the table. Glantz decided he would and called. It was folded around to John D'Agostino in the big blind, who checked his option.
The flop came and D'Agostino checked. Bees bet and Glantz called.
The turn was the and Bees check-called a Glantz bet.
The river was the and both players checked. Bees turned over for trip deuces and Glantz mucked.
Zack Milchman raised from under the gun, Matt Glantz called in the hijack, and Ismael Bojang defended his big blind. The flop fell , Bojang checked, and Milchman fired out a bet. Both of his opponents called.
The turn was the , and Milchman went to bet again.
"It's on me," Bojang corrected him before checking.
Milchman bet again, and only Bojang called.
The completed the board, Bojang led out for the first time, and Milchman made the call.
"Kings up," Bojang announced.
Milchman tabled for a set of jacks, and won the pot.
John D'Agostino was down to 118,000 and after a series of raises with Joe Mitchell he would be all in and at risk with with Mitchell holding .
The flop was a good one for D'Agostino. The turn was the and the river would give D'Agostino a lock on the hand - the - giving him a seven-high straight and the nut low. D'Agostino doubled up to 236,000 while Mitchell was still sitting with a very healthy stack of 560,000.
Joe Mitchell raised in late position, Phillip Hui made it three bets near the button, and Mitchell called. The two took a flop of , and Mitchell went into the tank.
"Yo!" Matt Glantz called to Mitchell's rail. "Your man 'The Slammer' is in a big pot."
"Chop! Chop! Chop!" one person yelled back.
"Why is he rooting for a chop?" Glantz asked the other players at the table, chuckling. "It's so negative."
Mitchell eventually led out, Hui called, and the turn was the . Hui called another bet from Mitchell, and the two checked on the river ().
Mitchell rolled over for a full house, and Hui had for a chop.
"He had him dead to rights till the river," Glantz said about Mitchell's hand, laughing again because the rail called for a chop.
Zack Milchman raised, John D'Agostino called, Matt Glantz called from the button and David Williams called from the big blind. The flop came and Williams checked. Milchman bet and was called by D'Agostino. Glantz raised, which was enough to set himself all in. He was called by both Milchman and D'Agostino with Williams folding.
The turn was the and Milchman check-called a D'Agostino bet.
The river was the and Milchman check-folded when D'Agostino fired out a bet. D'Agostino would win the side pot with a four but Glantz would scoop the main pot with for fours full of eights. That triple up moved Glantz up to 290,000 in chips.