Two Pair No Good?

Preflop, it was 1,550 three ways to the



The turn was the

Dalessandri rocked back in his chair with arms folded over his head, as his opponent fired a barrage of probing questions.
"Is two pair no good?" he asked, but Dalessandri didn't respond. The player found a fold and Dalessandri scooped the pot without showdown to jump up over 40,000 chips.