We have just had our first pre flop three-bet. Shawn Buchanan raised to 17,000 and Noah Schwartz three-bet to 46,000 and just as we were all getting excited Buchanan folded with a huge grin on his face.
The pre flop action was limp and check and we saw a flop of and both players checked their option. The turn was the and Roger Hairabedian check-called a 25,000 Michael Mizrachi bet. The river card was the sprakling red and Hairabedian checked to Mizrachi who immediately bet 90,000 and the bet put Hairabedian into deep thought mode.
"What's your kicker?" Mizrachi said after a few minutes whilst simultaneously doing a karate kick motion with his leg.
"You have a good kicker? You have nothing this time," replied Hairabedian.
"Come on you are giving me a heart attack," said Mizrachi after another few minutes of thought.
Eventually Hairabedian folded his hand, "that was a good fold for me," said Mizrachi.
Roger Hairabedian and Michael Mizrachi played a pot rather passively until the river on a board. When the last card fell, though, Mizrachi put out a near-pot-sized bet of 56,000, and Hairabedian got chatty before splashing in the call. "I think only two pair," he said, wagging his finger at Mizrachi.
But Grinder tabled for trips, probably expecting to win the pot outright. But Hairabedian's was equal, and they take their money back.
Shawn Buchanan raised to 16,000 and Noah Schwartz called. The flop was and Schwartz check-called a 10,000 Buchanan bet. The turn was checked through - - and the river was the and Buchanan won it with a 44,000 bet.
The two big stacks have started of very cagily and have yet to clash in any pot of significance. The stacks are pretty much the same as when we started and we are seeing more checks than bets and calls and not one post flop raise to speak of as yet.
Roger Hairabedian raised to 19,000 and Michael Mizrachi made the call. The flop was and both players checked. The turn of was also checked through before we saw the on the river. Mizrachi bet 40,000 and Hairabedian folded face-up after at least three-minutes thought.
From the button, Shawn Buchanan opened to 13,000, and Noah Schwartz defended.
The flop came out , and Buchanan repeated himself with a 13,000-chip bet. Schwartz check-raised to 33,000, though, and Buchanan flatted to see the turn. It was the , and Schwartz fired 48,000 at the pot. Buchanan called again, and the completed the board. Schwartz paused and checked this time, and Buchanan took his cue to make a big bet at the pot -- 154,000. The move sent Schwartz deep into the tank, and he cut out the calling chips from his stack to survey the potential damage. He had about 610,000 left in his stack, so the call was for about 25% of his chips.
After several minutes of deliberation, Schwartz released his hand into the muck.