Jehan Richards limped from under the gun and Nic Ioannoy got his last 4,500 in from two seats over. Terry Brookes and Saurabh Gulati called out of the blinds, Richards also came along.
Brookes led the K?9?3? flop for 10,000 and the only caller was Richards. Both checked down the J? turn and 6? river for Brookes to show A?4? for the busted nut flush draw. Richards had that beat with K?Q? and Ioannoy tossed his cards into the muck.
Benjamin "Guppie" Lingenfelder got involved in a three-bet pot to the K?K?4? flop which he bet for 8,000. His opponent raised to 25,000 and Lingenfelder folded to get shown K?Q?.
In the last hand of the level, Lingenfelder looked up the preflop all-in by Alan Jung for fumes.
Alan Jung: 9?8?
Benjamin Lingenfelder: A?5?
"I think I gonna win this one," Lingenfelder grinned and that prediction came true on the A?J?2?6?4? board.
He then told the dealer "I never win a hand before the break ... it's destiny" before heading out of the tournament area.
Devid Berlin limped from under the gun and called a raise to 3,000 by Stephen Courtney in the next seat. On the A?10?3? flop, Berlin check-called a bet and they checked the 9? turn to the J? river. Berlin now bet 10,000 with around 15,000 behind and he called all-in to the shove by Courtney.
The 3?3? of Courtney for bottom set were good to score the knockout, as Berlin's A?J? had flopped top pair and made two pair on the river.
There was a spectacular showdown unfolding over on table 12 when three flushes collided, and apparently Devid Berlin had also folded what would have been a flush as well.
On a flop of J?8?2? with 13,000 in the middle, the chips went in with Stephen Courtney and Bernard Gossard at risk against Ryan Brauer.
Stephen Courtney: A?7?
Bernard Gossard: K?Q?
Ryan Brauer: 6?3?
The 3? turn and 2? river were more or less a formality as Courtney tripled up, while Gossard doubled the remainder of his short stack behind against Brauer.
On a heads-up turn of K?6?3?6?, Rudolf Fourie checked out of the blinds and Leonard Dormehl bet 5,000. The check-shove by Fourie followed for 32,900 and Dormehl asked for a count, then called.
Rudolf Fourie: 8?6?
Leonard Dormehl: K?Q?
"Everybody but you knew what I have," Fourie joked and the river then brought the sucker punch with the K?. Fourie re-entered and drew the very same seat.
Russel Wheatley raised to 3,000 and earned two callers behind him in Gavin Sardini and Matthew Whitelaw. Wheatley bet the 10?6?2? flop for 6,000 to get called only by Sardini, then bet the 10? turn for 15,000 and jammed the 8? river. Sardini called it down with the J?J? and crashed out against the K?K? of Wheatley.
Jean Souprayenmestry raised to 1,200 and Huawei Sun called. Janno Cazemier on the button squeezed to 4,000 and both came along to the K?K?6? flop, which was checked through. Cazemier bet 6,000 on the 3? turn when checked to with Souprayenmestry being the only caller.
That led to the 2? river on which Souprayenmestry checked. Cazemier moved all-in for around 12,000 and was snap-called to show A?10? for a bluff, Souprayenmestry earned the knockout with Q?6? for a flush.
Back in August, the 2024 SunBet Poker Tour Time Square Main Event crowned a champion as SPT regular Harold Brooks posed for the winner shots inside of the Time Square Casino in Pretoria after a short-lived day. Brooks cut a deal with four other dealers to claim the largest piece of the ZAR4,926,600 ($266,036) prize pool.
Held in cooperation between South African gaming and entertainment giant Sun International and the Monster Jam Poker Tour (MJPT), the second SPT Time Square Main Event in the current year attracted a field of 391 entries across four starting days. The top 49 finishers earned a cash prize for their efforts, and the final five contenders agreed to deal numbers after a short final day.
For his efforts, Brooks took home ZAR714,287 ($37,857) and Patrice Ah-Nien from Mauritius officially finished in second place, followed by live satellite qualifier Gerrit van der Spoel.
In three-way action, Alvin Pillay bet 600 and was called only by Leonard Dormehl with the flop showing K?K?10?. They checked the A? turn and Pillay led the J? river for 3,000 in the small blind.
"Raise," Dormehl announced and tossed out 11,000. Pillay reluctantly called with the words "full house is good" and that's exactly what Dormehl showed, as he had flopped it with the K?10?.
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