Shannon Shorr opened to 2,200 from the button and a short-stacked Andy Frankenberger pushed his remaining chips into the middle for a raise to 28,000 from the small blind. Everyone else folded back to Shorr, who quickly followed suit.
The two-time bracelet winner has some work to do if he wants to make it past Day 2.
Speaking of those bracelets, he's wearing them today as he shows in the following interview with Lynn Gilmartin.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
32,000
2,900
|
2,900 |
|
|
||


flop was out on the felt, with Rettenmaier heads up against Steve Yea. Rettenmaier checked here and Yea bet 3,400. A check-raise to 9,200 from Rettenmaier was enough to scare off Yea and scoop up the pot.

flop and without hisitaation, Brunson bet 4,500. That was enough to scare off his opponent as Brunson raked in the small pot.


. Clemencon tossed out a bet, and Quijano called.
, both players checked, and the
completed the board. Clemencon fired 6,700, and Quijano tank-called. Clemencon rolled over 
for trip tens, and took down the pot.

. It was here that Lacay checked, and his opponent bet out 4,800. Lacay made the call and moved on to the turn.
on fourth street saw a repeat of action with Lacay check-calling a bet from the cutoff, this time for 10,200.
on the river saw a third check from Lacay and an all in bet from the cut off. Lacay's tournament life was on the line and after almost two minutes Lacay threw it away. Lacay now sits around 40,000, and needs to turn things around.

river. After Soulier got out of the way the hands were turned up to find that the all in player was ahead.

struck the river and gave him a winning straight.


. Shulman fired out 3,500, and his opponent called. The turn brought the
, and Shulman led out again, this time for 5,000. His opponent tossed in the call, and the river was the
.

and Chan's opponent c-bet for 3,000. Chan didn't take long to grab two orange chips and place them into the middle for a raise to 10,000.




and Kenney needed to dodge only a ten on the river to stay alive and double up.
and Gross had made a queen-high straight. He won the pot and sent Kenney to the rail, moving to a little over 80,000 in chips in the process.