A player in middle position raised to 1,000 and Xavier Kyablue three-bet to 3,500 on the button. Action folded back to the original raiser, who shoved for approximately 10,000 total. Kyablue snap-called and a showdown was held.
Opponent: 10?10?
Xavier Kyablue: A?A?
The 5?K?6?7?6? runout left Kyablue best with a sweat-free runout and he collected the rest of his opponent's chips.
Qi Chi raised from the button and Simon Lofberg defended in the big blind.
The 10?5?7? flop saw Lofberg play in flow. Chi bet out 1,600 and Lofberg check-raised to 6,000. Chi called.
The K? turn saw Lofberg bet out 12,000 and Chi made the call.
The 4? river prompted Lofberg to downsize to a bet of 4,200. Chi raised to 15,000 almost instantly. Lofberg called. Chi tabled Q?7? for a rivered flush to win him this pot.
Action picked up on the river in a hand between Bruce Knee in the hijack and the player in the cutoff.
With about 20,000 in the pot and the board reading 6?10?2?K?2?, Knee fired out a bet large enough to put the cutoff all in, who had roughly 26,000 behind.
After taking some time to think about it, the cutoff put in the call and saw the bad news when Knee tabled the winner with K?10? for two pair, kings and tens. The cutoff mucked his hand and was eliminated.
Mike Belov opened the action from early position with a raise to 1,200. Lloyd Yamada called in middle position, Neil Han called in the small blind, but Robert Young three-bet to 3,500 from the big blind. The players obliged to the fair price, and all flicked in a call.
The dealer put out 9?5?3? and action checked to Belov who fired 4,000. Only Yamada made the call.
Belov continued the aggression, wagering 10,000 on the 2? turn. Yamada called once more.
Action went check-check on the 7? river and Belov rolled over 10?10? to claim the pot.
Life Outside Poker is a new podcast for PokerNews hosted by Connor Richards that seeks to pull back the curtain on poker players and allow viewers and listeners to get to know them on a personal level.
In the tenth episode, Connor speaks with health and life coach Tyler Todt, a longtime poker player who made seven figures in early online poker days before taking a job in the banking industry and eventually leaving that to become his own boss and a health influencer.
Todt talked about online poker pre-Black Friday, bum hunting Tom Dwan, the benefits of a balanced life, avoiding the pitfalls of Las Vegas, being bullish on humanity and his favorite non-fiction books.