Vladimir Geshkenbein opened to 28,000 from middle position and Grant Levy made the call from the big blind.
Levy lead out for 38,000 on the flop and Geshkenbein made the call.
The turn landed the repeating and a bet of 84,000 followed from Levy.
"Will you show me if I fold?" asked Geshkenbein.
"Only cause you asked nicely" said Levy, and with that, Geshkenbein folded his face up.
Levy sheepishly rolled over his saying, "I thought Queen-high was ahead," as he raked in the pot to climb to 1,330,000 and snatch the chip lead from Geshkenbein.
The overall pace of play at our nine-handed unofficial final table seems to have slowed to a crawl, as we await the bubble burst. The one exception might be chip leader Vladimir Geshkenbein who seems to be involved in just about every other pot. Aussie pros Grant Levy and Jonathan Karamalikis appear to be patiently waiting for spots to exploit the action-loving Swiss table captain, but otherwise, we're in the calm before the storm stage.
Grant Levy has moved past the 1.2 million mark in chips, largely due to a recent three-way pot he played with chip leader Vladimir Geshkenbein and In Wook Choi.
Geshkenbein opened with a raise to 26,000 and Choi called from late position; Levy from the small blind.
All three players checked the flop and watched the dealer burn and turn the . First to act, Levy checked and Geshkenbein fired a bet of 51,000. Choi made the call and when the action returned to level, he deliberated for a moment before raising to 132,000.
Geshkenbein and Choi quickly folded and Levy raked in the pot, narrowing the gap between him and Geshkenbein at the top of the leaderboard.
Vladimir Geshkenbein entered the pot with a raise to 27,000 before Danny Huynh made it 75,000 to go. Neil Arce asked for a count before making the call as Geshkenbein passed.
The board to the river was checked down with it reading .
Huynh took a stab on the river by splashing the pot with a bet of 75,000, only to have Arce slid a stack amounting to around 500,000 into the pot.
Huynh quickly folded and Arce took down the pot to move to 730,000 in chips as Huynh slips to a dangerously low 230,000 and change.
Neil Arce opened to 31,000 from middle position, only to have Grant Levy bump it to 117,000 from the button.
With the action folding back to Arce, he deliberated for just on two minutes before pushing his last 250,000 into the middle. Levy made the call and the cards were tabled.
Arce:
Levy:
Levy would hit the front on the flop, and when the turn fell the , Arce would need to find one of the two remaining fours to stay alive.
As the onlookers pressed hard against the rai, the dealer burned and turned the to see Arce leap to joy hi-fiving his supporters on the rail.
With that rivered set, Arce doubles through to 580,000 as Levy slipped to 965,000 in chips.
According to Tournament Director Danny McDonagh, the High Roller's Event is scheduled to take an hour to an hour and a half break once the field reaches eight players.
When the players return, pending the status of the Main Event, they'll either be moved to the feature TV table, or resume play where they're currently situated, until the feature table is clear.