Hand #110: Dutch Boyd raised to 80,000 and Paul Cogliano made the call in the big blind. On the flop, Cogliano bet 75,000 and folded when Boyd raised it up to 200,000.
Hand #111: Cogliano limped from the small blind and then check-folded on the flop, when Boyd made it 40,000 to go.
Hand #112: Boyd raised to 120,000 from the small blind and folded to a three-bet of 265,000 by Steven Norden.
Hand#106: Paul Cogliano opened for 80,000 and won the antes and blinds.
Hand #107: Steven Norden opened for 95,000 from the small blind and Paul Cogliano called. The flop was the . Norden bet 60,000 and Cogliano made the call. The turn was the . Norden checked. Cogliano bet 105,000 and took it down.
Hand #108: Norden made it 80,000 from the button and Cogliano three-bet to 210,000 from the small blind. Back to Norden who called. The flop was . Cogliano led out for 170,000 and Norden raised to 410,000 and took it down.
Hand #109: Cogliano opened on the button and Norden called in the big blind. The flop was . They both checked and the turn was the . Cogliano bet 70,000 and Norden called. The river was the . Both checked again, and Norden won with .
Hand #101: Dutch Boyd raised to 80,000 from the button and received the blinds and antes.
Hand #102: Steven Norden raised to 85,000 from the button and Boyd defended his big blind. After the flop, Boyd mucked his cards after Norden continued for 65,000.
Hand #103: Boyd raised to 120,000 out of the small blind and Norden made the call one seat over after some consideration. The flop saw a bet of 125,000 by Boyd and that won him the pot.
Hand #104: Norden raised to 100,000 from the small blind and that triggered a fold from Paul Cogliano in the big blind.
Hand #105: Boyd received another walk in the big blind, causing applause from his rail.
Hand #100: Paul Cogliano raised to 80,000 from the button and Dutch Boyd moved all in for 650,000 from the small blind. Steven Norden folded in the big blind but Cogliano made a quick call.
Boyd:
Cogliano:
The flop was no help for Boyd, but the turn now gave him and the opponent a huge sweat. The river indeed helped him and Boyd scored the double up.
Hand #97: Paul Cogliano opened for 80,000 and Steven Norden called in the big blind. The flop was . A 65,000 bet from Cogliano got a call from Norden. The turn card was the and Norden bet 100,000 taking down the pot.
Hand #98: Cogliano got a walk.
Hand #99: Cogliano limped the small blind and Boyd in the big blind checked. The flop was . Two checks to the turn . Cogliano bet 45,000 and Boyd called. The river was the . Cogliano checked and Boyd bet 90,000. Cogliano moved all in and Boyd called with , Cogliano had . They both had a full house and chopped the pot.
Hand #91: Dutch Boyd raised to 80,000 from the small blind and Steven Norden made the call in the big blind. On the flop, Boyd continued for 80,000 and was called.
Both players then checked the turn and Boyd also checked the river. Norden glanced at his stack before announcing all in and Boyd mucked his cards.
Hand #92: Norden raised to 105,000 and won the big blind and antes.
Hand #93: Boyd received a walk in the big blind.
Hand #94: Boyd raised to 120,000 out of the small blind and that did the trick.
Hand #95: Paul Cogliano got a walk in the big blind.
Hand #88: Paul Cogliano raised to 80,000 on the button and Steven Norden in the big blind called to see a flop of . Norden checked and Cogliano bet 80,000. Norden raised to 175,000 and Cogliano let it go.
Hand #89: Dutch Boyd opened to 80,000 and Norden called from the small blind this time. Cogliano put in the calling chips. The flop was and the blinds checked. Boyd bet 120,000 and while Norden folded, Cogliano raised to 320,000. Boyd let it go.
Hand #90: Norden opened for 80,000 and in the big blind Boyd called. The flop came . Boyd checked and Norden bet 55,000. Boyd toyed with his chips and raised to 180,000 which Norden called. The turn was the and Boyd moved all in. Norden went in the tank and called.
Boyd had and Norden made the call with . The river was the and Norden doubled up.
This is Paul Cogliano’s first World Series of Poker final table and with just $22,204 in tournament winnings, this will be his biggest cash by far. We caught up with Cogliano while on break to see how it feels to be sitting on the ESPN stage.
PokerNews: How does it feel to be at your first 2014 WSOP final table?
I feel good. I don’t think I have made any big mistakes. I have been getting a bit lucky with the boards and the cards, but so far so good.
Has it been a tough final table?
I think it is getting tougher as it goes along. I think the better players made it to the final five.
Any key moments or key hands that put you on the road to the final table?
I bought in at 8:15 p.m., late. Doing that I think you make the most per hour and raises your chance of min-cashing.
At one point I was down to 4,800 chips and I was all in at about 8 percent to win. The hand went raise, call, a 3-bet by a very aggressive player, Dan Kelly. I had king-jack and I put my money in with 4:1 odds and one other person saw the flop. He bet, and it comes a 10-high flop with two clubs. I had the and he had aces. I ended up winning that and just kind of kept rolling.
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