On the heels of Jai Kemp's elimination, another player was all in. That player was Liv Boeree, who moved in for 41,500 after Edison Nguyen opened for 21,000. Nguyen made the call with pocket nines and found himself racing Boeree's ace-queen. It was almost a repeat of the Channing-Kemp hand. This time ace-queen came out ahead, hitting a queen on the flop and an ace on the turn. Boeree stuck her tongue out and shook her head a bit, as if getting a bad taste out of her mouth, when the river fell -- a card that looked very much like a nine at first blush.