From middle position, Brian Kim raised to 4,400. The cutoff seat and big blind both called to see the 

flop. Action checked to Kim and he fired a continuation bet of 6,600. Both his opponents folded and Kim scooped the pot.
2011 World Series of Poker
Michael "Timex" McDonald has just lost a race that would have earned him a spot in the top ten leaderboard.
After a raising war preflop, McDonald gave action to his opponent's 40,700-chip all in. McDonald was int he lead holding 
against the 
of his opponent, but when the board ran out 



, McDonald was forced to push a couple of stacks across the table while slipping to roughly 50,000 in chips.
Sarah Grant caught up with chip leader Brian Lemke who already won this event in 2009.
Jason Potter entered the pot with a raise only to have Luke Staudenmaier three-bet to 13,200 from the button.
Once the blinds passed, Potter slid out a four-bet amounting to 18,300. Staudenmaier sat there emotionless for close to a minute before sliding in a tower of yellow 1,000-denomination chips amounting to a five-bet of 36,600.
As Potter sat in the tank contemplating a tournament-altering decision for his final 100,000, Tim West would call for the clock after nearly four minutes went by.
Courtesy of the Prahlad Friedman dilemma that occurred last year, when the clock is called, a 70-second timer is started and placed directly in front of the player who's decision is being waited on. Once the timer buzzer sounds, his hand will be deemed dead.
As Potter now sit there with a timer placed just inches from his cards, he eventually chose to fold after roughly half the timer had expired.
"Show me a bluff Luke?" asked Potter, but Staudenmaier just pushed his cards at the muck and moved to just under 200,000 in chips.
William Reynolds open-raised to 4,200 from the cutoff and was called by Christian Harder on the button.
Flop: 

Williams checked and Harder took a stab at the pot with a 5,100 bet. Reynolds stoically made the call.
Turn:
Both players checked.
River:
This time, Reynolds led out for a 10,600 bet and Harder's cards quickly hit the muck.
From early position, Nick Schulman raised to 4,600. Action folded all the way around to the big blind and he moved all in for 47,300. Schulman double checked his hand and then called, showing the 
. His opponent in the big blind held the 
.
Schulman flopped a set and held from there as the board ran out 



. He eliminated his opponent and increased his stack to 124,500 in chips.
"Hey bro, how you going?" asked a player to a dealer not in action.
"Yeah I'm allright, you?" responded the player.
"I'm allright, I keep running into those Aces yo!" answered the player.
That happens. Yo.