A bit too early.
Max Silver opened to 11,000 under the gun, and Hans Winzeler three-bet shoved for his last 50,000 flat. Silver has plenty of chips to call with a hand like
, and that's just what he did with a chance to bring the field to the bubble. Winzeler was relieved to see a medium-strength hand shown down, and his
had him poised for the double up.
And then came the disastrous
flop. Silver keeps the run-good alive, out-flopping his opponent to leave him two cards from the door. Winzeler stood up and tucked his chair under the table as the turn came the blank
, and he had half his body turned away from the table when the dealer burned and turned the final card.
River: 
Ka-boom! Nobody was more surprised to see the two-outer than Winzeler, and this one has saved his tournament life. "It's my first set in the whole tournament," he said as he raked in the double. He's back to 111,500 now, and still shaking his head from that sick sweat.
| Jugador | Fichas | Progreso |
|---|---|---|
|
|
111,500
31,500
|
31,500 |
and Bedell checked. Waxman bet 12,000 and Bedell called to see the turn.
and Bedell checked again. Waxman kept his foot on the gas and fired 27,500. Bedell called.
and Bedell led into Waxman for 60,000. Waxman looked a little upset with the way the hand played out, but eventually made the call. Bedell then tabled the 
for a turned two pair. Waxman was visibly upset and mucked his hand.
board. With just about 60,000 in the pot, Tony G shoved in for 131,000 total. And he got called! Tom Bedell clearly
. But he couldn't, and he was drawing dead as soon as his chips crossed the betting line. Tony G showed up the unbeatable
