AJ Jejelowo raised to 25,000 under the gun and Gary Friedlander shoved from the big blind for about 130,000. Jejelowo folded after a few moments, giving the pot to Friedlander.
2010-11 World Series of Poker Circuit - Harrah's New Orleans
Thus far, this level has belonged to AJ Jejelowo as he has chipped up to about 950,000.
Level: 22
Blinds: 5,000/10,000
Ante: 1,000
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
AJ Jejelowo |
820,000
7,000
|
7,000 |
Allie Prescott |
704,000
14,000
|
14,000 |
Scott Lipshutz |
357,000
17,000
|
17,000 |
Harry Cullen |
207,000
-18,000
|
-18,000 |
Gary Friedlander |
161,000
-32,000
|
-32,000 |
That's another level down, and the players are off for a quick 5-minute break.
The next break will be in 75 minutes, and it will be the dinner break.
Allie Prescott opened the pot with a standard raise under the gun, and Allen Kessler three-bet shoved all in for 149,000. Prescott spent a minute making sure, but he eventually made the call to put Kessler at risk. It was another coin flip.
Showdown
Prescott:
Kessler:
The flop was just what Kessler was looking for, pairing up to take a big lead. "Kessler just needs to fade the two remaining tens," Steve Frezer announced over the mic. It proved to be the kiss of death for Kessler.
The turn kept him in front for the time being, but the river was rather unkind to "Chainsaw". The ripped off the deck, locking up the pot and the knockout for Prescott. Kessler's day is done in 6th place, good for $37,736.
Allie Prescott raised to 18,000 in the hijack and Harry Cullen re-raised to 34,000 from the cutoff. Matt Waxman put in the rest of his stack, 38,000, from the big blind. Prescott called, as did Cullen, to put Waxman's tournament life at risk.
The flop came down and Prescott checked. Cullen bet, sucessfully isolating the pot and showed . Waxman had a few outs with , but did not get there as the turn and brought his tournament to an end with a 7th-place finish.
Matt Waxman opened to 16,000, and Scott Lipshutz three-bet shoved from the cutoff seat. It was a total of 141,000, and the action came to Allie Prescott next. From the button, he asked Waxman how much he was playing (181,000), then settled on a fold. The blinds ducked out, too, ansd Waxman
Showdown
Waxman:
Lipshutz:
Let's race for it, shall we?
The flop smacked Lipshutz right in the dogballs. His set of eights pulled him into a massive lead with two to come, and Waxman could only catch up with running straight cards. The turn was a blank, and Waxman made a useless two pair as the river ended the hand.
After shipping that double, Waxman is left with just 40,000 chips, while Lipshutz climbs to 301,000.
Gary Friedlander opened with a raise, and AJ Jejelowo three-bet from the button. Friedlander made the call, and off they went to the board.
Both men checked through the flop, and the landed on the turn. Friedlander took control again with a leading bet of 60,000, and Jejelowo stared him down for a few minutes. He eventually flicked the chips into the pot, and the filled out the board on fifth street. Two more checks.
Friedlander showed up , and Jejelowo's was good enough to take it down.
Matt Waxman opened the pot with a button raise, and AJ Jejelowo three-bet shoved from the small blind. Waxman spent a good while in the tank, eyeballing his remaining stack and Jejelowo's mannerisms before finally surrendering his cards back to the dealer face-down.