Chris Moorman raised under the gun and received calls from Sam Stein, Annette Obrestad, and Jason Mercier. Action then checked to Stein on the 

flop and he fired out 5,700. Mercier was the only player to call and watch the
appear on the turn. It went check-check to the
river, at which point Mericer checked and Stein bet 11,200. Mercier woke up with a check-raise to 28,500, Stein tank-called, and Mercier said, "I have a four." Stein rolled over 
to take down the pot.
2011 World Series of Poker
Nivel: 12
Ciegas: 1,000/2,000
Ante: 0
Lee Watkinson was recently eliminated from the tournament after holding 
against the 
of Jason Somerville. A 

flop made things interesting, but Watkinson was ultimately eliminated.
We found this hand with a large pot at the river. Chris Moorman was first to act with the board reading
. He slid out 125,000, more than enough to cover what Josh Arieh had left behind. He took a good long tank while Moorman kept his stare down at the table. Arieh moved his stack in the middle to see Moorman table
. Arieh mucked his hand and left the tournament area.
The tournament clock says we have 98 players remaining in the field, which means 71 of them are going to walk away empty handed. The reason being that the $2,340,600 prizepool will only be distributed among the top 27 players with first place receiving $573,456.
1st- $573,456
2nd- $354,460
3rd- $264,651
4th- $198,927
5th- $150,453
6th- $114,525
7th- $87,702
8th- $67,596
9th- $52,406
10th thru 12th- $40,890
13th thru 15th- $31,183
16th thru 18th- $25,348
19th thru 27th- $20,129
A series of preflop raises and reraises resulted in Steve Billirakis being all in with 
against the 
of Nicolas Levi. We've seen a couple of these race situations throughout the day, but it seems the small pair is always holding up.
In this case, the flop came down 

and helped solidify Billirakis' lead. The
turn changed nothing, and the
river ensured a Billirakis double.
Erik Seidel, who has had quite the 2011 so far this year, raised to 4,000 after action folded to him in the cutoff. Tony Cousineau, a name you might recognize as the man with the most WSOP cashes without ever having won a bracelet, defended from the small blind and it was heads up to a 

flop.
Cousineau the check-called a bet of 5,000 as the dealer put out the
on the turn. Again Cousineau checked and Seidel continued to bet, this time 10,000. It was enough to get the job done as Cousineau released his hand.
With about 18,000 in the pot and a flop of 


, Michael Pesek checked to Chris Oliver, who bet a modest 3,100. Pesek made the call and the duo watched as the
hit the river. Both players politely checked and Oliver rolled over 
, which was good as Pesek silently mucked.
Jonathan Jaffe raised to 3,500 from the hijack and received a single caller in the form of Dan Martin on the button. Jaffe proceeded to bet 3,000 on the 

flop only to be raised to 8,800 by Martin. Jaffe refused to back down and bumped it to 15,800, which Martin called.
When the dealer burned and turned the
, Jaffe checked, Martin bet 35,000, and Jaffe tank-folded. Ever the gentleman, Martin allowed his opponent to see one card, which ended up being the
.