A player raised to 1,200 from early position and was three-bet to 3,000 by another player in middle position. David Levi called cold on the button and the initial raiser called as well.
Action checked to Levi on the J?4?10? flop and he bet 3,500. Only the initial raiser called.
Both players then checked down on the 6? turn and 10? flop and Levi's opponent tabled K?Q?. It was no good against Levi's A?K? and he took down the pot.
Roberto Betbese and Jaime Kaplan played a massive pot on a board that read 7?Q?A?K?K?.
With around 15,000 already in the middle, Betbese bet 11,200 and Kaplan raised to 25,000. Betbese went in the tank and counted his chips before three-betting all in for 44,300. It was then Kaplan who went in the tank as he squirmed in his chair with his arms folded.
"I'll still have chips," Kaplan said as he called.
Betbese turned over A?K? for kings full of aces and Kaplan folded facedown before the dealer slid his cards into the muck. Kaplan claimed to have had king-queen.
The action was caught on a four-way flop of 10?8?2?. Amy Fontaine had checked from the big blind and Roman Emelyanov bet 1,300 from under the gun into a pot of around 4,000. Jorn Walthaus made the call from the next seat over, as did Walthaus' neighbor Robert Grossglauser. Fontaine then put in the check-raise to 4,500 and all three players called.
On the 10? turn, the action checked to Grossglauser. He bet 15,000, only leaving himself 10,000 behind, and Fontaine was the only buyer. The 4? river then completed the board and Fontaine now bet enough to put Grossglauser all-in.
"This is gonna take a while," Grossglauer said upfront. After a while, he elected to save his last chips and folded his hand, shipping a big pot Fontaine's way.
Scott McKernan raised 1,200 in early position and a player on his left made the call before Frank Cupello put in a min-raise to 2,000. The small blind called and McKernan put in another raise to 5,200, forcing everyone except Cupello out of the hand.
The dealer fanned a flop of 10?3?2? and McKernan continued for 7,000. Cupello hesitated for a short period of time before releasing his hand. McKernan showed him K?K?.
Dae-Hyung Lee checked from the big blind on a board of 8?10?J?8?. Joseph Gallagher was in the hijack and fired 3,200 into the pot of 7,500 before Lee check-raised to 10,000.
Gallagher looked him up and the K? river fell. Lee now continued with another bet, this time of 14,000. Again, a quick call followed from Gallagher.
Lee showed Q?9? and declared "straight," after a puzzled look from his opponent. After hearing the news, Gallagher mucked his cards and the pot was awarded to Lee.
In a heads-up pot the board read 10?9?4?A?7?, and Lynne Ji fired out a bet of 4,000 into the pot of about 2,600. Her opponent mucked his hand and the dealer pushed the pot to Ji.
Jeff Sluzinski raised to 1,000 from early position and was called by the players in the cutoff and big blind.
Action checked to Sluzinski on the 8?K?2? flop and he continued for 1,500. Only the cutoff called.
Sluzinski's opponent check-called a 3,000 bet on the Q? turn and then led out for 10,500 when the 7? completed the board.
Sluzinski asked for a count before deciding to make the call. His opponent could only show 5?2? for a pair of deuces, which were no good against the K?J? of Sluzinski for top pair and he collected the pot.
Michael Petrecca was seen celebrating at Table 674 as he doubled up through Will Rickard to his immediate left.
On a board of 3?5?3?2?5?, Petrecca held 10?5? for fives full of threes and it was good against Rickard's flush with A?2? to double his stack of around 40,000.