[user38449]
Thomas Bichon
The pot of the tournament just went down, and its beneficiary was new chip leader Thomas Bichon.
Rep Porter opened the pot with a raise to 275,000. Bichon countered with a three-bet to 650,000.
"Do you have any idea how many chips you have, Thomas?" Porter asked. Bichon's chips were dirty stacked and quite difficult to count.
Tournament Director Jack McClellan stepped in to help.
"It's about two million total," McClellan offered.
Porter made the call.
The flop came down and Bichon dove into the tank, emerging about three minutes later and firing a 450,000 bet. Porter wasted no time making his counter move.
"I'm all in," he said.
Just as quickly, Bichon made the call, tabling two red nines for the mortal nuts -- top set. Still very much alive though, Porter tabled and would be drawing to a flush.
Photographers and a few other nosy spectators swarmed the stage to watch the dealer fill out the rest of the board... , .
Bichon's set held up, earning him the pot -- worth approximately 4.5 million in chips -- and the chip lead.
Porter meanwhile, was left crippled with under 50,000 in chips.
[user75032]
Porter all smiles as he survives that all in
After a half-hour without even so much as a flop, we finally had a showdown. Rep Porter opened the action to 220,000 preflop. After Thomas Bichon folded, Steven Fung moved all in for 1.4 million.
Uri Keidar hasn't played a hand all day (it seems) so it was little surprise that Keidar didn't play this one either. That moved the action back to Porter. He took a glance over his shoulder at the tournament clock, which had five minutes left until the next blind increase. That may have prompted Porter to gamble; he called all in for 1.08 million total.
Porter:
Fung:
Porter was in the lead, but the flop was full of potential, coming . Porter made aces; Fung had the nut flush draw. No spade hit the turn or the river . Porter secured the double-up.
[user38449]
Chip leader Thomas Bichon just moved one step closer to three million in chips after a recent heads-up pot against Steven Fung.
In a limped pot, Bichon led out with a min-bet of 80,000 on the flop and Fung made the call.
Both players checked the on the turn, but when the fell on the river, Bichon bet 200,000. Fung took less than a minute to make the call, only to see Bichon turn over the for a flush. Fung mucked his cards.
[user75032]
We just can't seem to find our next elimination. Rep Porter is now the short stack. He's moved in several times without being called. Most recently, Uri Keidar opened the pot to 175,000 from the small blind. Porter squeezed his cards and then moved in for 515,000 total, a raise of 340,000 back to Keidar. Keidar stared Porter down for a minute and then, despite getting better than two-to-one on his money, folded his hand.
The fold drew a guffaw from John Monnette, seated in the gallery. "Nice hand, Rep," he said with a snicker.
[user38449]
Uri Keidar
Rep Porter opened with a raise to 170,000 from under-the-gun and Uri Keidar made the call from the big blind.
Keidar then check-called a 200,000 continuation bet from Porter after the flop came .
4th Street delivered the , and Keider check-called another bet from Porter -- this time for 280,000.
The last card off the deck was the and both players knuckled the table, opting to move straight to the showdown. Keidar tabled king-queen for top pair and Porter mucked.
[user66118]
Steven Fung limped first in from the small blind, and Uri Keidar tapped the table for a free flop from the big.
Heads up then, the flop came out , and both players checked. The turn brought the , and Fung led out with a bet of 100,000. Keidar wasted no time calling, and the hit the river to fill out the board. Fung took a long pause before checking, and Keidar checked behind.
Fun cringed at his opponent's check, tabling for the nuts and the pot.