Players are now on a one-hour dinner break. When they return they'll play four more one-hour levels before bagging and tagging for the day.
2014 World Series of Poker
Cary Katz has been eliminated from the tournament. It appeared he got his chips in on a ![]()
![]()
flop holding ![]()
. Unfortunately for him, Will Givens had flopped two pair with the ![]()
. Neither the
turn nor
river helped Katz and he was eliminated from the tournament just shy of the dinner break.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
90,000
28,800
|
28,800 |
|
|
||
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
||
Ivan Freitez raised from the cutoff and David Pham defended his big blind.
The pair checked down the ![]()
![]()
flop and the
turn, but Pham bet 15,000 on the
river. Freitez reluctantly called with his ![]()
and Pham showed ![]()
for a flopped full house.
"No more play," said Freitez to Pham, "Next time you bet, I insta-fold!"
Sam Cohen open-shoved from middle position for 44,100 and her all-in bet went uncalled. Matt Salsberg was in the big blind and he open-folded ![]()
.
The next hand, Cohen open shoved again, this time for 53,100 thanks to the blinds and antes that were added to her stack on the previous hand. This time she picked up a caller in the shape of Jay Diaz. The other active players ducked out of the way an the cards flipped onto their backs.
Cohen: ![]()
Diaz: ![]()
A ![]()
![]()
gave Cohen outs to a flush in addition to being able to hit a king. This is exactly what she did when the
appeared on the turn. The
completed the hand and Cohen doubled through Diaz.
Diaz busted on the next hand when he moved all-in for less than the big blind. Isaac Baron completed the small blind and the big blind checked. The blinds then checked the ![]()
![]()
flop, Baron then check-folded to a 7,000 bet on the
turn.
The big blind showed ![]()
and it was good enough to beat Diaz's ![]()
when the
completed the board.
We're now down to 60 in this event.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
107,000
32,000
|
32,000 |
|
|
Eliminado |
Josh Morse got his last 60,000 all in preflop and was dominated by Daniel Strelitz.
Morse: ![]()
Strelitz: ![]()
Morse was in desperate need of a three, and he found one on the ![]()
![]()
flop. The
turn was of no consequence, and neither was the
river. With that, Morse received a much needed double.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
220,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
120,000
61,600
|
61,600 |
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
||
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
||
|
|
Eliminado | |
|
|
Eliminado | |
Scott Davies is currently armed with 82,000 chips at the 1,500/3,000/500a level, which is around 27 big blinds. Davies has numerous cashes at the World Series of Poker, the largest topping the scales at $30,974, his reward for a 356th place finish in the 2011 Main Event.
If Davies wants to beat that impressive score, and why wouldn't he want to, he'll need to finish in ninth place or higher.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
82,000
41,000
|
41,000 |
|
|
||
We missed the action unfold, but we do know a preflop raising war resulted in Stephen Hesse getting his sizable stack all in preflop against Isaac Baron.
Baron: ![]()
Hesse: ![]()
It was a flip for a pot of around 180,000, and Hesse needed to improve to stay alive. He didn't want to watch his fate and turned his head as the dealer put out the flop — ![]()
![]()
. Nothing for Hesse, though he didn't know it as he still had his back turned.
The
turn changed things a bit as a king would no longer win it for him (it'd give Baron a straight), but a queen would give him Broadway. The dealer burned one last time and put out the
. Hesse turned back around and discovered the bad news.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
380,000
75,000
|
75,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
Eliminado | |
The PokerNews Podcast crew covers several huge stories, including the PokerStars sale, Mike Matusow's penalty, and the decline of pot-limit hold'em. They are then joined by defending Main Event champion Ryan Riess to talk about his banner, his recent run bad, and much more.
You can subscribe to the entire iBus Media Network on iTunes here, or you can access the RSS feed here. The PokerNews family of podcasts is now available on Stitcher.