Vince Burgio got his last chips in on 7th street, but his two pair was no good against David Halpern's straight and seven-low. We are down a legend of the game as Mr Burgio busts in 10th.
Down to just 50,000 after a not-great start, Jose Paz managed to chop a pot with Chad Brown earlier, but he couldn't recover and after finding his last chips scooped up by David Halpern, he headed for the rail in 12th place.
Toboc was all in on third street, with Matt Savage, Richie Sklar and Zak Gilbert all calling.
The betting continued until Gilbert was all in on 5th street, creating a side pot.
Betting continued between Savage and Sklar on 6th and 7th, creating a decent side-side pot.
The hands:
Toboc: ( ) for a pair of nines to send him to the rail
Gilbert: ( ) for an ace-high flush to win the high on the main pot and his side pot
Savage: ( ) for for the entire low
Sklar: ( ) for the high on his side pot only
Clear? Good.
Result:
Toboc: out
Gilbert: 90,000
Savage: 150,000
Sklar: 80,000
Matt Savage was determined to get his chips in, raising on 6th street to a bet from William Kohler and then raising all in to another bet on 7th. Kohler called with a flush for the high, and Savage only got half the pot with his wheel.
Zak Gilbert tangled with relative big stack William Kohler, betting on 5th street when we caught up with the action and then calling bets from Kohler on 6th and 7th street.
The result: a chop.
Gilbert: ( ) for the high
Kohler: ) for the low
Gilbert's perched on 95,000; Kohler is lord and master of 225,000.
With only 27,000 in chips coming back today, Mike Krescanko had to move fast, and on his very first attempt at a double up, he instead got himself knocked out by Richie Sklar whose ace-high with a seven-low scooped up the whole of Krescanko's stack in one fell swoop.
Actually, that last was a lie -- Mr Jack Rosenfeldt is nowhere to be seen and is being anted off until such a time as he remembers that he has a final day to play. Oops.