[user46392]
With a fair few of his chips already in the pot, James "Flushy" Dempsey bet out on the flop and and chip leader Mark Tenner to his left flat-called.
The rest of Flushy's chips went in on the turn and Tenner called, and it wasn't looking good for Flushy.
Flushy:
Tenner:
River:
Flushy finds himself three-quartered and is now even shorter on just 30,000 or so. "Marvellous," he said.
[user75032]
Mark Tenner had a good hand to take a shot at knocking out James Dempsey. Dempsey opened for a raise, then called all in after Tenner three-bet. Tenner showed down against Dempsey's . We all had a good sweat when two spades hit the flop, , but the board bricked out from there with no possible low. Dempsey's queens were good enough for a double-up.
[user75032]
Three pair is generally no good in Omaha Hi/Lo -- except when your opponent also has three pair. Scott Bohlman raised the button preflop and was called by Patrice Boudet from the blinds. On a ragged flop of , Boudet check-called a single bet from Bohlman.
Both players checked the turn. When the river fell , Boudet check-called another bet. Bohlman opened . He had flopped two pair, tens and deuces, then rivered a bigger two pair, aces and tens. Boudet disgustedly flashed X, having turned sixes and fours and rivered aces and sixes. Aces and tens was a winner.
[user75032]
CK Hua (on Day 2) - 17th Place
It's all over for CK Hua. He was crippled in a hand against Josh Schlein. Hua check-raised a flop of after Schlein bet. Schlein called to the turn, then called after Hua again bet.
When the river came and put a fourth Broadway card on the board, Hua slowed down and checked. His frustration was readily apparent in the way he mucked his cards after Schlein bet.
That hand left Hua with fewer than 40,000 chips. He went out a few hands later in 17th place.
[user46392]
Michael Keiner bet out on a flop, and James Dempsey raised a goodly proportion of his tiny stack. "Put it all in," urged Keiner, indicating that he intended to reraise to cover; all the chips indeed went in, and they were on their backs.
Flushy:
Keiner:
Turn:
River:
"Easy," commented Keiner as Flushy scooped the pot. "Nice comeback, sir," said Fabio Coppola.
[user75032]
"I'm gonna play my way out of the outhouse, JW," Frankie O'Dell told J.W. Smith. O'Dell had called a preflop raise made by Derek Raymond before Sirous Jamshidi called from the blinds. Action passed to O'Dell on a flop of and O'Dell bet. Both opponents called.
On the turn O'Dell bet again. This time only Jamshidi called, prompting O'Dell to check the river after Jamshidi checked. Jamshidi called a straight six, . It was good for a scoop, as O'Dell's flopped trip sixes , never improved.
O'Dell is down to about 75,000 chips. Jamshidi has recovered to 170,000.
[user75032]
Meng La
We came running over to Green #151 to see lots of chips in the middle -- including all of Meng La's chips. The board showed . La showed two pair, , and no low. His opponent, Mark Tenner, turned up . Tenner made a bigger two pair, aces and tens, and also had no low. He therefore got all of the pot and sent La to the rail.
[user75032]
Josh Schlein opened the preflop action with a raise. All folded to Danny Smith, who three-bet all in. Only Schlein called.
Smith:
Schlein:
Schlein made a noise of disgust upon seeing Smith's hand. It got worse after a flop of . The on the turn was a sweat card, giving Schlein some hope of making a spade flush, but he missed with the river. Neither player had a qualifying low; the whole pot went to Smith courtesy of his set of aces.
"Must be nice to wake up with aces," said Schlein.