Graeme Ladd raised preflop and Jordan Young called from the big blind. The flop came and Young check-raised all in, having his opponent covered. Ladd called for the rest of his chips and was ahead with versus Young's flush draw .
The turn was the and the river brought the , giving Young the flush and eliminating Ladd in 16th place.
Melissa Gillett raised to 55,000 from the hijack, and Adam Bacon moved all in for 184,000 from the small blind. Gillett thought for a moment and eventually called.
Bacon tabled , at risk against the chip leader who held .
The flop came and Bacon still needed either a king or a jack to double up or he was out the door. The turn was the and Gillett paired her eight, but it changed nothing. The river, however, was the and Bacon survived to see another hand.
Nathan Pfluger was in late position and raised it up to 40,000. David Pham took a look down at his cards and decided to move all in for his remaining 164,000 chips. Pfluger thought for a moment and eventually called.
Pham was at risk and tabled , while Pfluger was dominated with . "Well, I need a king," said Pfluger.
The flop came and Pfluger laughed after seeing he was already drawing dead. The turn was the and the river as the , giving Pham a full double.
Caleb Patrick limped in from early position, and David Shober immediately moved all in for about 165,000 from middle position. Action folded back around to Patrick and he snap-called.
Shober tabled and Patrick revealed .
The flop came and Shober was up and out of his seat when he saw that Patrick flopped top set. The turn was the and Shober was drawing dead to the on the river to finish in 18th.
With over 200,000 in the pot and the board reading , Yu Li moved all in and put his opponent, Melissa Gillett, to the test. Gillett sat and pondered what do for several minutes and finally came to the conclusion of calling. Li said "nice call" before even seeing his opponent's hand as he rolled over . Gillett tabled and when the came on the river she improved to a full house eliminating Li from the tournament.
After the hand, Phil Collins stated from across the table, "All these young kids want to misbehave. But you're a principal, this is what you deal with for a living."
Action folded around to Robert Lisser in the small blind, and he decided to move all in for his last 117,000 chips.
Australia's Melissa Gillett was in the big blind and had a mountain of chips in front of her, as she came in to the day as the overwhelming chip leader. After a few moments, Gillett called.
Lisser tabled and Gillett showed .
The flop came and Gillett picked up a pair of fives, putting Lisser in even more danger holding two under cards.
The turn was the and Lisser picked up some outs to make a flush or a straight. But the river was the and Lisser was unable to improve, sending him to the rail in 23rd place.