It comes , and Shulman begins stacking out a bet. He makes it 300,000, and Zamani flat-calls. Fourth street pairs the board with the , and Shulman keeps the heat on with another bet, 700,000 this time. Zamani's had enough; he kicks his cards back to the dealer, and Shulman's cheering section does the wave as their man drags the pot.
2010 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure
2010 PCA Main Event
Day: 6
Event Info
It comes , and Shulman begins stacking out a bet. He makes it 300,000, and Zamani flat-calls. Fourth street pairs the board with the , and Shulman keeps the heat on with another bet, 700,000 this time. Zamani's had enough; he kicks his cards back to the dealer, and Shulman's cheering section does the wave as their man drags the pot.
"Ah... 420.... Yeah!" said one member of the peanut gallery.
Barry Shulman is the lone caller (big blind) and the two see a flop which is checked by both.
The turn brings the and Shulman leads out with a 300,000 bet which is called by Reiman.
Shulman checks when the falls on the river, and Reiman checks behind.
At the showdown, both players reveal a pair of nines, but Reiman's ace kicker bested Barry's accompanying eight to win the pot.
8h 9c... as 9h
The flop comes down . Gimbel checks and Zamani checks.
The turn card is the and both check again. The river is another ten with the . Gimbel fires 225,000 and Zamani calls.
Gimbel tables pocket tens for four tens and Zamani holds pocket eights. Gimbel scoops the pot.
The flop comes out , and the action check-checks. Fourth street comes the , and Reiman knocks the table again. Shulman takes that as his cue to bet 800,000, and that's good enough to win the pot right there.
The flop comes down and Shulman is first. He bets 600,000 right away. Gimbel leans forward and looks at Shulman's stack. He then moves all in and Shulman quickly folds.
Zamani folds, but Reiman asks for a count, peaking the interest of the crowd.
Tournament emcee Neil Johnson tells the crowd that Ryan's all in is for approximately five million in chips.
Reiman then takes one last look at his hole cards before tossing them back to the dealer, surrendering the hand to D'Angelo.