Monday, October 31, 2016

MicroMillions 6: fzmas annihilates Courchevel final table to win Event #79 [$3.30 PL Courchevel]NO Deposit bonus $43

I don't speak Swedish, but I FEEL "fzmas" is loosely translated as "terminator." With seven players remaining in MicroMillions Event #79 Pot-limit Courchevel, fzmas took out all six opponents including the overall three players in exactly four hands. That's right, three players liquidated in exactly four hands. Courchevel must come easy to fzmas, who encountered little or no resistance en path to a slightly easy victory.

MicroMillions 6 Event #70 $3.30 PL Courchevel attracted 2,493 runners. These bodacious and adventurous Courchevel enthusiasts boosted the prize pool to $7,479.00. The highest 320 places paid out with $1,273.45 put aside to the eventual champion.

With nine remaining, action went hand-for-hand. Sweden's fzmas had amassed the most important stack with 3 million, while two short stacks, Sabr1988 and kuzbass 71, were looking to keep their heads above water with under 500K apiece.

Sabr1988 became the unlucky "bubble boy" after you have it all-in preflop with J♠ flashing because the door card. Sabr1988's A♥A♣K♣5♠5♥ lost to tapadeli's A♦K♥J♣9♥6♣ when the board ran out K♦Q♣J♥7♠2♦. tapadeli won the pot with two pair and Sabr1988 bubbled off the general table in ninth place. The general table of eight was set.

MM6 E79 FT.jpg

Event #79 - Final Table Chip Counts:Seat 1: pulya1980 (1,537,172)Seat 2: tapadeli (1,032,425)Seat 3: kuzbass 71 (762,078)Seat 4: hustler1984 (496,763)Seat 5: avictoria (1,396,307)Seat 6: ivanvilchez8 (1,747,256)Seat 7: fzmas (3,067,713)Seat 8: nastine666 (2,425,286)

The Courchevel final table commenced during Level 41 with blinds at 60K and 120K. fzmas held an organization lead with 3 million, while hustler1984 clung to the quick stack with a shade under 500K.

tapadeli eliminated in 8th place

It didn't take very long before someone became the primary casualty on the final table. With 9♦ showing because the door card... pulya1980 min-raised 240,000 and tapadeli called all in for 150,347.

pulya1980: 9♣9♥6♥4♠2♦tapadeli: Q♦Q♠J♥T♠2♣

The board ran out 9♦8♣2♥5♣3♥. pulya1980 flopped a suite of nines, but rivered a six-high straight to win the pot. tapadeli flopped a straight draw, but didn't improve. Argentina's tapadeli became the primary player to exit on the final table and hit the street in eighth place, which paid out $74.79.

hustler198 eliminated in 7th place

Canada's hustler198 was on life support upon getting crippled and nearly obliterated in a prior hand. The hand that at last did him within the... 7♦ was the door card, so big-stacked bully fzmas opened to a heady raise of 420,000, super-short hustler1984 called all-in 66,763, and avictoria also referred to as (fzma's original raise) from the large blind. Three-handed. On a flop of 7♦7♠3♥, fzmas fired out 97,676 and avictoria foled. Heads-up. Both players tabled their cards:

fzmas: 7♣6♠5♥5♦4♠hustler1984: A♦Q♣9♥8♦6♣

The turn was the 6♥ and the river was the 3♠. fzmas flopped trips and turned a whole house to win the pot. hustler1984 could only muster up two pair -- sevens and sixes. For a seventh-place finish, hustler1984 collected $149.58.

ivanvilchez8 eliminated in 6th place

On first street, the 9♠ was visible. ivanvilchez8 opened to 490,000, fzmas bumped it as much as 1,610,000, and ivanvilchez8 called all-in 467,256.

fzmas: A♦A♥7♣7♥3♦ivanvilchez8: A♣K♣Q♣Q♦8♥

fzmas was ahead with Aces against Queens. The board ran out 9♠6♠4♥4♠T♣. Both players only improved to 2 pair, but fzmas's two pair (Aces and fours) was superior to ivanvilchez8's two pair (Queens and fours). Argentina's ivanvilchez8 busted out in sixth place, which paid out $224.37.

kuzbass eliminated in 5th place

Another shorty bid goodbye. With 9♣ showing on first street, short-stacked kuzbass 71 open-shoved for 174,156 and both fzmas and nastine666 called. On a flop of J♦9♣8♥, fzmas fired out 480,000 and nastine666 bailed. Heads-up.

fzmas: K♣Q♣T♠8♦5♦kuzbass 71: A♣K♦9♦5♥4♦

fzmas flopped a straight and kuzbass 71 was in serious trouble. The turn was the 3♥ and the river was the J♠. kuzbass 71's two pair was no match against fzmas's Queen-high straight. fzmas dragged the pot and added more chips to his big stack. Russia's kuzbass 71 went busto in fifth place, which paid out $373.95.

avictoria eliminated in 4th place

Four-handed went quick. In the event you blinked, you missed the action. The 8♣ was the door card. avictoria opened to 700,000, fzmas bumped it as much as 2.3 million, and avictoria called all-in for 936,307.

fzmas: Q♣Q♦T♥8♦7♣avictoria: K♠Q♠Q♥J♣5♦

The board ran out 9♣8♣7♦3♠2♣. Unfortunately, avictoria didn't improve on a couple of Queens and lost to fzmas's rivered Queen-high flush. Germany's avictoria took home $523.53 for a fourth-place finish.

nastine666 eliminated in 3rd place

On the very next hand, Brazil's nastine666 met an unfortunate fate. Guess what appeared because the door card? Yes, another ominousrominous nine! The 9♦ was exposed on first street, fzmas opened to 700,000, nastine666 bombed it all-in for 2,011,130, and fzmas called.

nastine666: K♦Q♥9♥7♦4♠fzmas: A♣Q♣9♣8♣3♦

The board ran out J♠J♦9♦5♠8♥. Both players had two pair -- Jacks and nines -- however, fzmas held an Ace-kicker and won the pot. Belarus' nastine666 busted out in third place, which paid out $707.81.

HEADS-UP: pulya1980 (Russia) vs. fzmas (Sweden)Seat 1: pulya1980 (2,617,519 in chips)Seat 7: fzmas (9,847,481 in chips)

With two remaining, fzmas held a commanding lead approximately 4-to-1, however. Although heads-up only lasted two hands, fzmas lost the primary pot and coughed up a huge advantage.

pulya1980 eliminated in 2nd place; fzmas is the brand new Courchevel champion!

On the primary hand of heads up, pulya1980 avoided a quickie elimination and doubled up. pulya1980 won the primary pot with full boat holding A♣K♠Q♣6♦6♣ against fzmas' A♠8♣7♠4♠3♥ after the board ran out A♦Q♠Q♦J♦4♥. pulya1980 dodged a bullet, as fzmas' lead was trimmed to just two million (7.2 million to 5.2 million).

Despite the initial setback, fzmas stopped pulya1980's comeback dead cold. At the second hand of heads-up, delivered a knock-out blow.

On the general hand of the tournament, fzmas flopped a flush and that is the reason all she wrote. Another nine because the door card, with the 9♠ exposed on first street. fzmas raised to 600,000, pulya1980 bumped it as much as 1,400,000, and fzmas called. The flop was J♠9♠4♠. pulya1980 fired out 2,800,000, and fzmas called. The turn was the 5♣, pulya1980 bet 1,035,038, and fzmas called.

pulya1980: Q♥9♦9♣5♦2♣fzmas: Q♣J♣T♠6♠2♦

The T♦ fell at the river, which didn't held pulya1980. fzmas won the hand with a flopped flush.

For a soulful and hard-nosed runner-up performance, Russia's pulya1980 collected $897.48.

Congrats to Sweden's fzmas for winning Event #79 Courchevel and taking home a first-place prize worth $1,273.45.

MicroMillions-079 $3.30 PL CourchevelEntrants: 2,493Prize pool: $7,479.00Place paid: 320

1. fzmas (Sweden) - $1,273.452. pulya1980 (Russia) - $897.483. nastine666 (Belarus) - $707.814. avictoria (Germany) - $523.535. kuzbass 71 (Russia) - $373.956. ivanvilchez8 (Argentina) - $224.377. hustler1984 (Canada) - $149.588. tapadeli (Argentina) - $74.79

MicroMillions is sort of over! For more info including a schedule of remaining events, visit the MicroMillions 6 home page.

Pauly McGuire is an author and freelance contributor to PokerStars Blog.



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ANZPT Canberra Day 3: Levels 17 - 20 (blinds 6,000-12,000, ante 1,000)NO Deposit bonus $43
^

5:20pm: Fifteen-minute break

5:15pm: Leigh Warne eliminated in 5th place

Leigh Warne's tournament has come to an end and again Toothpick Tony was the destroyer.

The chips were in preflop with Warne going with [ah][qc] but Toothpick showed [qs][qh]. Both players' tournaments hung within the balance, because the board ran out out [ks][ts][2h][5c][8h] to depart Toothpick's ladies in front to take it down.

Warne collects $18,760 for his 5th place finish while Toothpick is as much as 580,000.

leigh warne ft anzpt canberra.jpg

Leigh Warne eliminated in 5th place

5:05pm: Nguyen collects with top pair

Toothpick Tony opened with a raise from under the gun to 32,000 and collected two callers in Khiem Nguyen and Sammy Huang to look a flop of [qh][2c][5s]. Action checked around and the turn brought the [7s]. Action again checked to Nguyen at the button who bet 55,000. Huang folded but Toothpick made the decision because the [8s] completed the board at the river.

Toothpick checked and Nguyen bet 86,000. Toothpick quickly made the decision but mucked when Nguyen tabled [qd][td] for prime pair.

4:50pm: Huang finds aces

After a failed limp-re-raise in a blind battle with Khiem Nguyen, James Broom opened the action a couple of hands later with a raise to 25,000. Again Nguyen was in a punishing mood as he three-bet to 65,000 at the button. The twist was Sammy Huang entering into at the action with a flat-call from the small blind. Broom smelt a rat and folded because the two players saw a flop of [kd][5c][qh].

Huang checked to Nguyen who bet small - just 65,000. Huang instantly declared himself all in, and just as quickly, Nguyen slammed his cards down into the muck in disgust. Huang proudly showed his [as][ac] for an additional monster hand as he climbs to 1.25 million. Nguyen is on 480,000 with Broom at 210,000.

4:30pm: A splinter for the Toothpick

Leigh Warne has taken a bite out of Toothpick Tony. Warne opened to 27,000 before Toothpick three-bet to 75,000. Action folded back to Warne who announced himself all in for 267,500 in total. Toothpick gave it some quick thought but decided to let it go.
Toothpick slips to 490,000 with Warne as much as 350,000.

4:20pm: Level up, blinds 6,000-12,000, ante 1,000

4:15pm: More for Sammy

Khiem Nguyen opened with what he intended to be a raise, but he threw out the inaccurate chip denominations and was ruled to a decision. That brought in Sammy Huang and the 2 blinds to peer a flop of [qd][2s][qs]. Action checked around and the turn was the [ks]. Action checked to Nguyen who bet 22,000 with Huang making the call.

The river was the [6s] to position four spades on board but that did not slow Nguyen who bet out 58,000. Huang thought for a moment and coupled the bet. It was an even call as Nguyen tossed his cards face down into the muck in resignation. Huang is now as much as 1.1 million.

4:05pm: Sammy Huang, the million dollar man

Sammy Huang is constant on his merry way with another big pot against James Broom. Huang opened with a raise before Broom three-bet from the small blind. Huang called and the 2 took a flop of [9s][6c][3h].

Broom led out with of venture of around 85,000 but Huang instantly moved all in and Broom folded just as quickly.

"See I WILL BE ABLE TO fold ace-king!" chucked Broom, relating to their clash earlier today. Broom is back at the short stack with 180,000, with Huang now up over a million in chips.

3:55pm: Luke Edwards eliminated in 6th place

After Leigh Warne raised from the small blind, Luke Edwards moved all in for around 100,000 from the massive blind. Warne made the call.

Edwards: [qc][jd]
Warne: [ks][5c]

Warne was in front along with his king and it stayed that way because the board bricked out [ts][3h][6d][7d][as]. Edwards heads home in 6th place for $15,410 in prize money.

luke edwards ft anzpt canberra.jpg

Luke Edwards eliminated in 6th place

3:45pm: Edwards chops one

Luke Edwards have been very quiet at this final table as he struggles to seek out any cards to ship his short stack into the middle.

When he finally did find [ad][9d] and moved all in, James Broom quickly called and tabled the similar hand - [ac][9c]. Edwards was happy to be freerolling at the [8h][jh][5d] flop, however the [kc] turn and [2d] river left both players to cut it up. Edwards continues to be the fast stack with 100,000 chips.

3:30pm: Andrew Watson eliminated in 7th place

Andrew Watson opened with a raise from the cutoff to 22,000 before Khiem Nguyen made it 60,000 to head from the small blind. Action back with Watson and he moved all in for around 240,000 with Nguyen making the call.

Watson: [ah][qc]
Nguyen: [7d][7h]

The race was on but Watson missed everything at the board of [3c][5s][ks][8h][2c]. Nguyen takes the pot and moves as much as 650,000 with Watson heading to the cashier in 7th place for $12,730 in prize money.

andrew watson ft anzpt canberra.jpg

Andrew Watson eliminated in 7th place

3:20pm: Level up, blinds 5,000-10,000, ante 1,000

3:15pm: George Graziani eliminated in 9th and Tristan Bain eliminated in 8th place

WOW! AN ENORMOUS double KO has seen two players sent to the cashier as cult hero "Toothpick Tony" has stormed right into title contention.

The action started with Tristan Bain opening to 17,000 before the short-stacked George Graziano moved all in for 26,500. Play was then with Toothpick who announced a re-raise to 53,000. Bain wasn't going anywhere as he moved all in for 253,500. Toothpick thought for a couple of moments before making the call!

Bain: [qh][qc]
Graziano: [ac][6h]
Toothpick: [kh][kc]

The board bricked out [3c][6s][3d][4h][7c] to go away the kings in front. Toothpick covered both players as they were eliminated in sensational fashion. Graziano picks up $8,040 for 9th while Bain will pocket $10,050 for 8th place. Meanwhile Toothpick is up over 550,000 chips!

tristan bain ft anzpt canberra.jpg

Tristan Bain eliminated in 8th place

3:10pm: Yabba Jabba dooooo!

James Broom doesn't mind doing things the hard way, but even he shed a bead of sweat before nailing a river to double up in the course of the unlucky George Graziani.

Broom open-shoved for 122,000 from under the gun and action folded around to Graziani at the button who made the call.

Broom: [kd][qd]
Graziani: [ad][qs]

Broom was in trouble however the board arrived [6c][6s][5s][7h][ks] to land Broom a surprising three-outer river to stick alive! Broom doubles to 260,000 with Graziani now left crippled.

james broom ft2 anzpt canberra.jpg

James Broom is relieved to search out a river to stick alive!

2:55pm: Sammy puts the foot down

Sammy Huang has extended his chip lead after again pounding on Germany's Khiem Nguyen.

Nguyen opened to 16,500 from under the gun before Huang three-bet to 42,000 next to talk. The table folded around and Nguyen made the decision to look a flop of [qd][tc][5c].

Nguyen checked it over to Huang who bet 53,000. Nguyen called and the turn brought the [7s]. Nguyen checked again and Huang didn't hold back as he made it 100,000 to head. Nguyen made a reluctant fold as he slips to 360,000 with Huang now as much as 800,000.

sammy huang ft anzpt canberra.jpg

Our runaway chip leader is local Sammy Huang

2:40pm: Broom lays down a monster

With the board reading [td][kd][7h][jh][ts], James Broom was sitting within the tank contemplating an 84,000-chip bet from Khiem Nguyen. It represented almost 1/2 Broom's stack and he was clearly having a tricky time with the decision.

Broom leant right in just about Nguyen on his direct left and with surrender his mouth was virtually whispering into his ear. Broom didn't stop chattering nevertheless it was totally inaudible and Nguyen didn't react within the slightest. It was almost awkward to observe but after a couple of minutes of seeking to get a reaction, Broom eventually folded a shockingly strong [9s][8s]! We have seen Broom make call downs with fourth pair, now he's folding a straight!

Nguyen pads his stack to 460,000 with Broom right down to 185,000.

2:20pm: Level up, blinds 4,000-8,000, ante 500

2:05pm: Broom lands a handy guide a rough double up

The short stack of our final table, James Broom has landed a snappy double up on the expense of Andrew Watson.

Action folded to Watson at the button and he raised it to 13,500. Broom was within the small blind and he declared himself all in with Watson creating a quick call.

Watson: [ad][qs]
Broom: [kc][tc]

The flop landed [ac][2c][jh] which interested both players as Watson hit a couple but Broom picked up straight and flush draws. The turn was the [as] to depart Broom needing a club to stick alive. He called for the [3c] but instead the [4c] arrived which was just as pretty to provide Broom the flush to double as much as 250,000. Watson is back to 300,000.

2:00pm: Final table kicks off!

The players are back following the break and prepared for the ANZPT Canberra final table!

Here's how they are going to line up with approximate chip counts:

Seat 1: Luke Edwards (Australia) (PokerStars Qualifier) - 170,000
Seat 2: George Graziani (Australia) - 157,000
Seat 3: Tony "Toothpick" Kambouroglou (Australia) - 272,000
Seat 4: Andrew Watson (Australia) (PokerStars Player) - 425,000
Seat 5: James Broom (Australia) - 118,500
Seat 6: Khiem Nguyen (Germany) - 590,000
Seat 7: Sammy Huang (Australia) (PokerStars Qualifier) - 447,000
Seat 8: Tristan Bain (Australia) - 280,000
Seat 9: Leigh Warne (Australia) - 225,000

The players have satisfied their media commitments and been introduced "rock star style to the audience here on the Casino Canberra - all that was missing was some pyrotechnics and theme music!

The final table is now underway with 21:31 left on this level with the blinds at 3,000-6,000 with an ante of 500.

anzpt canberra final table.jpg


















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Biggest Jackpot In History Hit At Online CasinoNO Deposit bonus $43
The Top Online Casino Gambling News Reporting Site Since 2002!

Published on August 14, 2013 by April Gardner

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The man was playing the Melon Madness game when he hit 'The Big One' jackpot. It was an experience of an entire life for the slot player, and one who the casino was happy to peer occur.

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PartyCasino is a part of the bwin.party network of online slot casinos. The jackpot hit Sunday surpassed the former record of 866,000. The former record was held just for a month before it was broken this past weekend.

"We are focusing an enormous period of time and effort on building the most efficient mobile casino available," said Shaked. "and it's great to look our players enjoying, and winning, on our games."

Mobile gaming has become increasingly popular as individual countries begin to regulate the industry. The most important online gaming market on the earth is thought of as to be the US, and a number of other states have authorized online casinos in recent months.

The UK has long been the leader in mobile gaming, and lots of companies based within the UK have began to partner with US gaming companies with the hope of breaking into the U.S. market within the future.



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Sunday, October 30, 2016

LAPT9 Panama: Main Event final table coverage archiveNO Deposit bonus $43

FINAL TABLE LIVE UPDATES (CLICK HERE FOR FINAL DAY RECAP):

11:08pm: It's over! Andres Carrillo is LAPT9 Panama champion ($138,225); Ruben Suarez runner-up ($86,880)!Level 34 - Blinds 120,000/240,000 (ante 30,000)

Whoa... what a finish! The stacks had gotten shallower and shallower, and after several more hands were ended preflop, Andres Carrillo and Ruben Suarez got to a flop, then got all of it in... after which it was over!

The final hand began with a button raise to 500,000 by Suarez, with Carrillo calling. The flop came K♣4♦2♦, and Carrillo quietly checked. With similarly stoic reserve, Suarez announced he was all-in. 

That's when the thrill began.

Carrillo called and dramatically stood from his chair, slamming down his cards -- 8♦6♦ for a diamond flush draw. Suarez showed his 9♥9♠, revealing he was good for the time being, and his considerable rail began shouting encouragement that the board would run out clean for him.

The 8♠ turn got them going even more, the shouts of "neh-grow, neh-grow, neh-grow" getting louder and louder as they called for an additional black card. It was raucous enough for Tournament Director Fernando Obando to name for calm, adding just a little more suspense-building delay before the river card was dealt.

Then it came... the K♦! The flush came in for the Colombian, and the victory was his!

Carrillo pumped his fist excitedly and was soon mobbed by friends supporting him, and shortly he extracted himself to provide Suarez a hug after what turned out to be an emotional ending.

Back in a bit of with a recap of today's exciting final day in Panama! --MH

Andres Carrillo Celebration-LAPT Panama-2016-0093.jpg

Carrillo's fans mobbing their man

10:53pm: I see your bluff and lift you, another bluffLevel 34 - Blinds 120,000/240,000 (ante 30,000)

These two players was very creative throughout this LAPT9 Panama Main Event final table and a quarter-hour into Level 34, they each showed that creativeness with some interesting bluffs. The primary was within the type of a shove, as Ruben Suarez opened the button to 500,000 after which called Andres Carrillo's three-bet from the massive blind. 

The price to look the A♠6♠3♣ flop was 1,225,000 however the price to make it past those three cards was Suarez's 3,400,000 chip stack. That's because Carrillo checked and Suarez shoved, bringing a sigh fold from Carrillo. We were at the opposite side of the table but Carrillo flashed his cards to the rail before he folded, with the group telling us and everybody opposite them that he had "rey, rey" or pocket kings. 

Suarez showed K♥Q♦ and once his rail heard what Carrillo folded, they let loose another loud roar. That brought the stacks nearly even however the Columbian was unlikely to be outdone. A COUPLE OF hands later, he ran a bluff of his own, check-calling 500,000 on a A♠K♣6♥ flop after which leading the 8♥ turn for 1,180,000. 

Suarez folded and Carrillo showed 6♠4♠, getting a bit of of his chips and mojo back with a bluff of his own. -- WOC

Heads Up-LAPT Panama-2016-0086.jpg

Heads-up continues

 

10:45pm: New level, Suarez narrows Carrillo's leadLevel 34 - Blinds 120,000/240,000 (ante 30,000)

The pair have moved into yet one more level, where the min-raises are actually with reference to half a million.

A series of uncalled all-ins by Ruben Suarez has enabled the Venezuelan to near the distance a bit, and he now sits with about 4.65 million while Andres Carrillo continues to guide with about 6.35 million. --MH

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
34 120,000 240,000 30,000

10:36pm: Shoves, shoves, shoves before Suarez dropsLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

Ruben Suarez was just caught bluffing but before that, this final table battle was a from side to side shoving match. One player would shove, the opposite would fold, then the opposite player would shove, forcing another fold. That continued for the simpler a part of a couple of orbits until the players finally saw a flop.

Andres Carrillo limped the button and Suarez checked his option within the big blind. Both players checked the 9♠8♦5♣ flop and after the A♠ fell at the turn, Suarez checked but only to check-raise to 1,000,000. Carrillo had bet 250,000 and after some thought, and a glance at his opponent's stack, he locked eyes with the dealer and announced "all-in". 

Before the words left his lips, Suarez folded and while his rail have been loud, there's now a lifeless silence among them, as their man is down near 2,700,000. -- WOC

10:27pm: Carrillo grabs leadLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

In one of the most first heads-up hands, Ruben Suarez raised to 400,000 from the button and Andres Carrillo called. 

The flop came T♥7♣Q♣, Carrillo checked, Suarez bet 400,000, and Carillo called. The turn was the 6♣ and Carrillo checked again, and this time Suarez bet 1 million. Carillo called right away.

Both then checked the J♥ river, and when Carrillo turned over Q♠9♣, Suarez mucked.

Carrillo seizes the advantage, moving up around 7.2 million while Suarez is now back to 3.8 million. --MH

10:17pm: Aaron Mermelstein eliminated in 3rd place ($62,200)Level 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

Aaron Mermeltein-LAPT Panama-2016-9954.jpg

Aaron Mermelstein - 3rd place

Aaron Mermelstein was the fast stack on the final table and while he got two shoves through, he was looked up on his third all-in attempt. The yank shoved 2,260,000 from the button and after a fold, Andres Carrillo called within the big blind. 

Carrillo held A♠Q♦ and he had Mermelstein's Q♠T♣ dominated. The fast stack had to hit to stick alive and while his rail was shouting for a "ten", Carrillo was quietly standing next to his seat. The J♣7♣6♦ flop didn't pair Mermelstein but it surely may supply some interesting run outs with the suitable turn. 

The right turn did fall, because the 9♠ increased Mermelstein's equity with a straight draw. Unfortunately for him, that's all he had by the river, a draw, because the 4♦ completed the board and his elimination. He'll make just over $62,000 for his 3rd place finish, a year after notching a podium run within the LAPT8 Panama High Roller, and heads up play is ready to begin.

Ruben Suarez can be taking 6,300,000 into heads up, holding a slight lead over Andres Carrillo's 5,690,000. -- WOC

10:13pm: Plenty of foldingLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

It's almost all-in-or-fold time for everybody at this point, although we're still seeing preflop opens (but rarely any response).  

The last dozen hands played by the trio only saw a single flop, with a few of the rest being walks. The exception was a hand by which Ruben Suarez raised to 550,000 from the button, Aaron Mermelstein called from the large blind, then Mermelstein check-folded to his opponent's bet after a 6♣9♥4♦ flop. Suarez showed the 9♦ as he collected the chips.

Suarez leads in this day and age with 4.95 million, Andres Carrillo is next with 3.4 million, and Mermelstein third with about 3.6 million. --MH

10:03pm: Suarez shoves and shoves and shovesLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

There are a couple of ways you'll build a stack and never letting your opponents breathe is a kind of ways. Ruben Suarez hasn't let anyone catch a breath over the past few hands, shoving nearly every chance he's gotten since doubling through Aaron Mermelstein.

He moved all-in in four straight hands, open shoving twice, three-bet shoving once after which capping it off with a button shove with A♣K♣. Suarez showed the overall time, likely as it was the most productive hand out of the bunch and the Venezuelan is now behind as regards to 4,500,000.

Aaron Mermelstein is playing 2,800,000 and Andres Carrillo, who have been relatively quiet this level, is operating near 3,700,000. -- WOC

9:56pm: Suarez doubles back through MermelsteinLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

The action starting with Ruben Suarez at the button, he looked down at his cards and announced he was all-in for what would later be determined to be 1.765 million. 

It folded over to Aaron Mermelstein within the big blind who said "call," though actually meant to mention "count" (he would explain). That constituted a call, although because it turned out Mermelstein said he'd has been calling, anyway.

Mermelstein tabled Q♦T♣ while Suarez had T♠T♥. The 2♦3♥5♣K♠5♠ board ran clean for Suarez, prompting a large roar from his now much-larger contigent at the rail. Suarez is as much as 3.6 million now while Mermelstein slips back to 3.8 million. --MH

9:50pm: Mermelstein doubles and is "laxxed"Level 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

With with regards to 60 total big blinds in play, we knew the action was going to be fast through Level 33. That action got started at the first hand of the brand new period, with Aaron Mermelstein shoving and doubling through chip leader Ruben Suarez. 

Mermelstein moved all-in from the small blind for 2,535,000 and Suarez snap called within the big, tabling 7♥7♣. Mermelstein had three immediate outs, as he held T♥6♣ and after the gang was pushed back from the rail by the tournament staff, he hit on of them at the J♥T♣5♠ flop. 

Suarez's rail was quieted and after the A♦ and 8♦ completed the board, Mermelstein's small rail began a passionate, but brief, "Team USA!" chant. Mermelstein could only laugh at his rail and the double, taking a sip of water before getting pushed the over 5,000,000 chip pot. 

"I'm laxxed." he said, stacking up his now chip leading inventory. --- WOC

9:47pm: Play resumes; 3 leftLevel 33 - Blinds 100,000/200,000 (ante 30,000)

With Ruben Suarez and Andres Carrillo virtually tied for the lead, cards are back within the air. --MH

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
33 100,000 200,000 30,000

9:42pm: Quick break

They've reached the top of the level, and the players are taking a brief five-minute break before continuing. An update of the counts appears below. --MH 

        Name Country Chips
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 4,130,000
Andres Carrillo Colombia 4,065,000
Aaron Mermelstein USA 2,795,000

9:29pm: Suarez's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts ShovesLevel 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

Earlier today, we introduced Martin Harris' beta-version Badugi varient 'Sgt. Pepper' and while Ruben Suarez won't know anything about that game, yet, he's show the nut-low twice within the last orbit. Those shows came after shoves, that forced folds and the primary was against Aaron Mermelstein.

The American opened the button to 320,000 and Suarez shoved from the small blind for just shy of 3,400,000. Mermelstein asked for a count after which flipped over the A♣ before folding. Suarez answered with essentially the most prized card in 'Sgt. Pepper' the A♥ and he took down the pot. 

A few hands later, Andres Carrillo opened the button to 400,000 and really quickly, Suarez announced himself "all-in". That shoved weighed in at 4,000,000 and after some thought, Carrillo flashed 5♣5♦. Again, Suarez showed the A♥

These shoves has been stepping into and out of favor at this final table but they're bound to raise a grin. So may I introduce to you, the player you have known for the last three days, chip leader Ruben Suarez. -- WOC

9:21pm: Carrillo has the hearts, grabs leadLevel 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

Ruben Suarez opened with a raise to 355,000 from the small blind, and Andres Carrillo called from the big.

The pair both checked the single-suited flop of T♥5♥Q♥, then Suarez led for 250,000 following the 2♠ turn and Carrillo called.

The river brought the 6♣ and a check from Suarez. Carrillo hesitated about 10 seconds, then set out one big stack and one shorter one -- a raffle of 700,000. Suarez, leaned back in his chair, plucked a chip off his stack and tossed it forward to suggest a call.

Soon Suarez was leaning forward to peer the bad news -- Carrillo had flopped a flush with K♥9♥ -- and Suarez mucked. Carrillo leads now, having moved up around 4.4 million. Suarez has 3.425 million and Aaron Mermelstein 3.15 million. --MH

9:04pm: Comeback on for Carrillo?Level 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

The last orbit have been all Andres Carrillo, and the Columbian might now be working a slight chip lead after winning a pot from Aaron Mermelstein. The yank opened the button to 320,000 and Carrillo called within the big ignorant of see the Q♣J♣T♥ flop. 

Andres Carrillo-LAPT Panama-2016-0034.jpg

Comeback for Carrillo?

Both players checked and Carrillo led the A♥ turn for 250,000. Mermelstein called and the A♠ paired the board at the river. Carrillo took a handful of chips, looking like 820,000, and went to position them over the road but before they might touch the felt, Mermelstein's hand was within the muck. 

Both players are playing very similar stacks, with Carrillo holding a minimal advantage on the top of the leaderboard. -- WOC

8:59pm: Back-to-back for CarrilloLevel 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

Taking down the blinds and antes in a given pot award the victor of said pot 270,000 chips and when a player opens, after which you are taking it down, you'll win much more. Andres Carrillo is realizing this phenomena and during the last two hands, has added nearly 1,000,000 chips to his stack.

Carrillo shoved from the massive blind after Aaron Mermelstein limped the button after which at the very next hand, he shoved from the small blind after Ruben Suarez opened the button to 325,000. Those shoves have Carrillo playing just about 3,300,000, that is near average as these three players find themselves within touching distance heading through Level 32. -- WOC

8:52pm: Mermelstein shoves, collects, back on topLevel 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

Andres Carrillo opened from the small blind with a raise to 400,000, Aaron Mermelstein defended the massive blind with a call, and the flop came 6♠7♦K♣.

Carrillo didn't wait very long before adding up a gamble of 490,000, and Mermelstein studied for some time before calling. The turn then brought the J♥, and when Carrillo said he was checking this time, Mermelstein said in no time he was pushing all-in.

Carrillo sat studying the board for only a beat or two, then tossed his hand away.

Mermelstein is leading now with 4.85 million, Carrillo is at 3.25 million, and Suarez has about 2.9 million. --MH

Aaron Mermelstein-LAPT Panama-2016-0015.jpg

Aaron is up

8:41pm: New level, same slow paceLevel 32 - Blinds 80,000/160,000 (ante 10,000)

The blinds and antes have gone up and while that are supposed to force some more action, as everyone's stack is now shallower, it hasn't had that effect at the first few orbits of Level 32. The similar slow pace has played out and during the last ten hands, we've only seen one flop. 

Ruben Suarez took down that pot but as opposed to that, it has been relative small ball pre flop and three-betting that has ruled the last period of play. -- WOC

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
32 80,000 160,000 20,000

8:33pm: Small pots, relatively speakingLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 10,000)

As the extent winds down, the 3 players has been exchanging several small pots, although by now "small" means pots of a half-million or thereabouts -- i.e., 25 starting stacks.

Andres Carrillo was the least active of the 3 as he maintains his lead. --MH

Final Table-LAPT Panama-2016-0045.jpg

Three-handed action

8:17pm: Jack-high, as a bluff, works for Suarez alsoLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 10,000)

Ruben Suarez is brief but that does not mean he's staying out of the action. He just played a large pot against Andres Carrillo, bluffing at the end to for a fold and increase his stack. Action was picked up with Suarez opening the button to 250,000, with both Carrillo and Aaron Mermelstein coming along within the blinds. 

They checked the K♣6♠4♠ flop, with Suarez continuing for 375,000. Carrillo called and Mermelstein mucked to send two players to the turn. The 7♠ fell and both players checked to look the A♥ complete the board. 

Carrillo checked for a 3rd time and after some thought, Suarez bet 450,000. He left himself slightly below 1,500,000 behind and a near quarter of his stack was good to force Carrillo out. His supporters' section liked the win but they liked Suarez's swagger even more, erupting with a mix of laughter and cheers after he showed J♣9♣

Carrillo could only shake his head and after a perfectly-timed river bluff Suarez moved up near 3,200,000, Suarez leaned back in his chair to respire a sigh of relief. -- WOC

Ruben Suarez-LAPT Panama-2016-9987.jpg

Ruben climbs back

8:12pm: Nines work for SuarezLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 10,000)

Ruben Suarez raised to 265,000 from the button, Aaron Mermelstein called from the massive blind, and the pair saw a flop come Q♠6♠4♦. Mermelstein check-called of venture of 125,000 from Suarez, then both checked the 2♦ turn.

The river brought the 3♠ and another check from Mermelstein, and Suarez pushed out a gamble of 200,000. Mermelstein thought a brief while, grabbing calling chips and never appearing too pleased in regards to the situation. Ultimately he called, though, then patted the felt as Suarez showed 9♦9♥ and Mermelstein mucked.

A small group of Suarez supporters cheered at their man earning the pot, and he's back to about 2.3 million now while Mermelstein has 3.85 million. --MH

7:59pm: No "trebol" means Corrilla doubles through SuarezLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 10,000)

Andres Carrillo was probably the most active player since getting back from the dinner break and while he came back because the short stack, he's now the chip leader. Carrillo just doubled in a major blind versus blind encounter, spiking the turn and holding throughout the river to transport over 5,000,000. 

The hand was picked up with Raul Suarez limping the small blind and after some thought, Carrillo raised to 620,000 from the large. Immediately, Suarez announced himself "all-in" and Carrillo called, shooting from the table while flipping over A♠K♦. Suarez held K♣T♦ and he needed to hit to attain the knockout, something he did because the T♣4♣4♠ flop fell. 

The roar from Suarez's rail was deafening, making it clear who the favourite is among those watching the action. That group wasn't even done celebrating before Suarez's fate changed though, because the A♣ fell at the turn, matched with less fanfare. 

Carrillo gave a fist pump and his few friends at the rail cheered but they weren't home free just yet, because the short stack still needed to fade the river. Suarez's supporters were soliciting for a "trebol", Spanish for "club" but they did not get one, because the 7♥ completed the board.

When Carrillo's stack was cut down, it weighed in at 2,625,000. He's now playing over half the chips in play midway through Level 31, while Suarez is playing 1,850,000. -- WOC

7:54pm: Mermelstein takes from SuarezLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 10,000)

The flop was intriguing, and the turn made things much more curious. But that's where the betting led to a hand between Aaron Mermelstein and Ruben Suarez. 

After Mermelstein raised to 240,000 from the button, Suarez three-bet to 600,000 and Mermelstein called. The primary three community cards were J♥Q♣8♣, prompting a number one bet of 335,000 from Suarez. Mermelstein took a couple of half-minute, then called.

The turn then brought the T♣, a card that will have completed several draws. Suarez checked this time, and after Mermelstein bet 600,000, Suarez took his time before folding.

Mermelstein has about 4.05 million now and is simply prior to Suarez with 3.9 million. --MH

7:46pm: Carrillo shoves from the smallLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 20,000)

Short-handed play is a tactical game, with position and aggression ruling the land. Andres Carrillo did not have the primary but he had quite a lot of the second, as a shove from the small blind increased his stack. 

The hand was picked up with Carrillo just calling the blinds from the small and, within the big, Mermelstein raised to 300,000. The Columbian thought for a couple of moments and did a handy guide a rough inventory of his stack before verbalizing "all-in". 

Mermelstein took his headphones off and confirmed his opponent's declaration. He then re-checked his cards and sent them into the muck, conceding the pot to Carrillo. Carrillo is as much as 2,700,000, while Mermelstein takes a small hit to fall near 3,200,000. -- WOC

7:41pm: Play resumes; 3 remainLevel 31 - Blinds 60,000/120,000 (ante 20,000)

The final trio are back of their seats and the LAPT9 Panama Main Event final table is back in action. --MH

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
31 60,000 120,000 20,000

6:23pm: Dinner break

The final three players within the LAPT9 Panama Main Event have reached the top of Level 30, and now they're off to enjoy a 75-minute dinner break. Below find the present counts. --MH

        Name Country Chips
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 4,355,000
Aaron Mermelstein USA 3,820,000
Andres Carrillo Colombia 2,815,000

6:17pm: The ol' limp-shoveLevel 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Just now Aaron Mermelstein limped in from the small blind, watched Ruben Suarez make it 300,000 to move from the large blind, then pushed all-in, getting a comparatively quick fold from the Venezuelan.

The three players are pretty even on the moment, with Suarez in front with about 4.2 million, Mermelstein next with 3.65 million, and Andres Carrillo third with about 3.2 million. --MH

6:06pm: Austin Peck eliminated in 4th place ($48,500)Level 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Austin Peck-LAPT Panama-2016-0024.jpg

Austin Peck - 4th place

After getting crippled by Aaron Mermelstein, Austin Peck was left with just over one big blind. That one big blind had a possibility to triple up, after Peck was all-in at the very next hand. Peck's stack took some time to get in though, as he just called the 100,000 big blind from under the gun, leaving himself just 5,000 behind. 

Ruben Suarez, next to behave at the button, raised to 200,000 and while Mermelstein thought within the big blind, Peck joked, "I'VE some fold equity." Mermelstein called and Peck elected not to use the fold option, putting his final chip into the pot. 

After the dealer found out the numbers and split the chips, Mermelstein and Suarez checked down the T♠9♣6♣Q♣T♥ board. Mermelstein tabled 6♠4♠ and Suarez folded, before Peck checked out his cards to sweat his tournament fate. 

The 5♦ was the first, no help, and the 8♠ was the other, meaning he was officially eliminated in 4th place. The 20 year old will make $48,500 for his near podium finish and Aaron Mermelstein is now playing just shy of 4,800,000 heading towards the overall quarter-hour of Level 30. -- WOC

5:58pm: Peck crippled after Mermelstein doubleLevel 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Aaron Mermelstein open-raised all-in from the cutoff for his last 2.13 million, and after thinking for some time Austin Peck chose to reraise all-in himself for just over 2.2 million.

It folded over to Andres Carrillo who appeared in agony, putting his face within the crook of his arm after which rising up and covering it together with his hand. After some time he folded, and Mermelstein showed his K♥Q♦ while Peck tabled T♥T♠.

The 6♥7♠4♦ flop was okay for Peck, however the K♠ fell at the turn to position Mermelstein in front. The river then brought the A♣, and suddenly Mermelstein is up around 4.4 million while Peck has just 100,000.

"Hey, I'VE one big blind," Peck said with a shrug. Meanwhile Carrillo seemed to be telling the others he'd folded a couple of queens. --MH

5:44pm: Raul Paez eliminated in 5th place ($38,040)Level 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

After over two hours without an elimination, two players have fallen within the last two hands. Raul "El Toro" Paez was the following to go, with Ruben Suarez scoring another knockout. That hand was picked up with Paez open shoving 1,100,000 from under the gun and Suarez calling within the big blind. 

Raul Paez-LAPT Panama-2016-0022.jpg

Raul "El Toro" Paez - 5th place

It was a flip, with Paez and his K♥J♠ needing to hit to stick alive. Suarez held 9♥9♠ and after the A♦5♥2♥2♦8♠ runout, "El Toro" was bounced in 5th place. He'll make $38,000 for his final table run and suddenly, Ruben Suarez is playing just about half the chips in play with 4,800,000. --  WOC

5:41pm: Paul Cukier eliminated in 6th place ($29,880)Level 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Paul Cukier open-raised all in for just over 600,000 from under the gun, and it folded around to Ruben Suarez within the big blind. Suarez took a moment to double-check the volume of the raise then called, turning over Q♠T♦ to Cukier's J♥T♠.

The board ran out a humdrum 4♠8♠K♣K♥9♣, and Cukier is out in sixth. Suarez is as much as 3.45 million and appears to have grabbed the lead with five left. --MH

Paul Cukier-LAPT Panama-2016-9831.jpg-Paul Cukier-LAPT Panama-2016-9997.jpg

Paul Cukier - 6th place

5:33pm: Four shoves, no callsLevel 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Yes, we just titled a post with this exact wording but this time, there have been not three shoves but four. Three of these came from the low man at the final tin a position totem pole, as Raul "El Toro" Paez has dropped back below the 1,000,000 chip mark. 

He's been able to slightly increase his stack, enough in order that he's now longer bottom. That's where Paul Cukier is playing 750,000, after folding to Ruben Suarez's shove from the small blind. Cukier couldn't discover a call within the big and he's now working just seven big blinds. -- WOC

5:28pm: Carrillo folds overpairLevel 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

Very few hands have got to a flop over the past half hour or even fewer have got to the turn. Three players just saw a flop but a shove from Ruben Suarez ended proceedings and dropped Andres Carrillo under 2,000,000. 

Action was picked up with Suarez opening within the hijack to 225,000 and after some folds, Carrillo and Aaron Mermelstein called within the blinds. The Columbian led the 7♣7♠2♦ flop for 240,000 and after the chip leader folded, Suarez shoved. He had his opponent slightly covered and after some thought, Carrillo folded 8♣8♠ face up. 

Mermelstein looked surprised, Suarez looked relieved and we continue on six-handed. -- WOC

5:23pm: New level, Mermelstein leading final sixLevel 30 - Blinds 50,000/100,000 (ante 10,000)

With six players still a part of the mix, the blinds and antes have gone up again. A SNAPPY have a look at the counts shows how much shallower the quick stacks are becoming. --MH

             Name Country Chips
Aaron Mermelstein USA 3,350,000
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 2,100,000
Andres Carrillo Colombia 1,770,000
Austin Peck USA 1,495,000
Paul Cukier Costa Rica 1,050,000
Raul Paez Spain 950,000
LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
30 50,000 100,000 10,000

5:12pm: Three shoves, no callsLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

The last quarter-hour of Level 29 was relatively uneventful. With a handful of short stacks, the action have been tight or even when those short stacks move in, there hasn't been any calls. Three of these shoves have occurred over the past few hands, with Raul Paez doing it twice. 

The first of these shoves came from chip leader Aaron Mermelstein though, after Andres Carrillo limped the small blind. Mermelstein moved in from the massive and Carrillo folded to take a small hit down near 1,500,000. 

Paez is now over the 1,000,000 chip mark, the primary time he can say that since doubling with aces. He's likely going to want another a kind of doubles though, because the blinds and antes are set to move up again and people high costs are going to make it tough for him to stick afloat. -- WOC

5:03pm: Mermelstein moves aheadLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

Andres Currillo opened for 230,000 from the cutoff, and after slightly deliberation Aaron Mermelstein called from the button. The blinds stepped aside, and following the 6♣5♦5♠ flop, Currillo bet 200,000 and Mermelstein called.

The turn was the 3♦, and after Currillo checked the pace slowed somewhat as Mermelstein took a half-minute before betting 450,000, and Currillo took in regards to the same period of time before calling.

The dealer burned a card and completed the board with the 4♠, and Currillo checked again. Mermelstein didn't take too long before setting a large column of white 25,000 chips out in front of him, signaling of venture of 500,000, and Currillo went deep into the tank for roughly three minutes before finally letting his hand go.

Mermelstein bumps as much as 2.82 million on that one, having followed Currillo's earlier path and gone from worst to first to take over the chip lead. Meanwhile Currillo has about 1.95 million now. --MH

Aaron Mermelstein-LAPT Panama-2016-0019.jpg

Mermelstein moves into first position

4:50pm: Another double within the big blindLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

With the stacks short, we can't be surprised if most of our updates over the following level or so involve strictly pre flop encounters. One just occurred in a blind versus blind encounter, with Aaron Mermelstein doubling to come again to average. 

The table folded to Andres Carrillo, who asked for a count of Mermelstein's stack within the big blind. The chip leader was within the small blind and after he declared "all-in", Mermelstein snap called. His 990,000 was in danger and he had to hold to double, as he had A♦8♣ to Carrillo's Q♥T♥.

The Columbian picked up hundreds outs at the turn but after the J♥7♣5♦5♥5♣ board ran out, Mermelstein was confirmed the double. He's now playing on the subject of 2,100,000 while Carrillo remains to be leading along with his 3,000,000 chip stack. -- WOC

4:46pm: Suarez straightens out PeckLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

Compared to a couple other players at this final table, Austin Peck has yet to turn much emotion. Win, lose or draw, he's kept a straight face and remained level but after Ruben Suarez rivered a straight and got paid off by Peck, we have seen the primary break in that unbreakable face. 

Action was picked up on a board of 9♣6♥2♣3♦4♥, with Peck leading out for 110,000. He was within the small blind and Suarez, within the big, counted his chips before pushing out a raise. It was sized at 330,000 and after some thought, Peck called. 

"Good call." Aaron Mermelstein said, peaking his head across the dealer. It will was good in the end but on this spot, it was incorrect, as Suarez tabled Q♥5♠ for a rivered straight. Peck looked confused by all of it, flashing his opponent a glare before rolling his eyes.

His cards were within the muck and a tight component to his stack was now with Suarez, with both players now near the chip average heading through Level 29. -- WOC

Ruben Suarez-LAPT Panama-2016-9988.jpg

Ruben there, done that

4:40pm: All-in and no callLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

The average stack presently is a bit of over 22 big blinds, this means that players under that mark are anxious to switch their circumstances quickly.

We just watched three straight hands involving all-in opening shoves before the flop, and in all three cases nobody chose to challenge the at-risk players.

In fact, the pushes came from three different ones -- first Raul Paez, then Ruben Suarez, then Aaron Mermelstein -- and every of these three won the blinds and antes in consequence. --MH

4:31pm: The very best spot for acesLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

A few hands after Austin Peck doubled, another short stack was multiplying his chips by two. Raul "El Toro" Paez have been trending downwards and while he's still under seven figures, he has just a little extra space to work after picking up pocket aces in a super spot against Paul Cukier. 

The tabled folded to Cukier and the Costa Rican shoved from the small blind. Paez, who was behind 460,000 within the big blind checked his cards after which snap called, turning over A♦A♥. Cukier rolled his eyes and threw over Q♣2♣ and while he hit a couple at the Q♥6♠4♦ flop, the 9♠ turn and K♠ river didn't bring him anything else. 

He shipped 1 / 4 of his stack to his left, leaving himself with 1,300,000 and Paez, who started the day because the final table chip leader, may well be starting a comeback after being left for dead just a few minutes ago. -- WOC

Raul Paez-LAPT Panama-2016-9990.jpg

Paez fighter, back up off the mat

4:27pm: Peck picks up a doubleLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

In one of the vital first hands of Level 29, some of the short stacks doubled, as Austin Peck's pair of eights held against Ruben Suarez's lower pocket pair. The hand was picked up with Suarez opening to 260,000 from under the gun after after some folds, Peck shoved from the massive blind. 

His stack weighed in at 1,155,000 but that count wasn't confirmed until after the runout, as Suarez snap called with none more information. Peck tabled 8♥8♠ and Suarez cringed when he saw the pair, as he held 7♥7♦

The A♦J♥6♠2♠A♣ runout confirmed Peck's double and when the dust settled, he was playing over the chip average for the primary time in recent memory. At the other end of the spectrum, Suarez was at his lowest point of the day, working 1,100,000. -- WOC

4:25pm: Play resumes; 6 remainLevel 29 - Blinds 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

The final six are back and play has resumed. Originally of that last level Raul Paez was the chip leader and Andres Carrillo the fast stack. They've switched positions now with Carrillo on top and Paez returning to a stack of just over six big blinds. --MH

       Name Country Chips
Andres Carrillo Colombia 4,050,000
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 2,105,000
Paul Cukier Costa Rica 1,815,000
Austin Peck USA 1,165,000
Aaron Mermelstein USA 1,005,000
Raul Paez Spain 500,000

Raul Paez-LAPT Panama-2016-9977.jpg

Paez looks to reverse downward trend

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
29 40,000 80,000 10,000

4:07pm: Break time

The remaining six players have reached the tip of another level, and with Andres Carrillo the large stack and Raul Paez having gotten short another 15-minute break has arrived. --MH

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4:03pm: Mermelstein's miracle riverLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

Aaron Mermelstein, as we mentioned earlier, was battling throughout just today 4 session. Most of these battles has been with the yankee being the shortest stack on the final table but he's not bottom, after catching a miracle river to double through Paul Cukier. 

Mermelstein moved all-in for 495,000 from middle position and after some folds, Cukier snap called within the big blind. The Costa Rican held K♠K♦, meaning Mermelstein's 4♥4♣ was drawing to simply two immediate outs. The Q♥8♠5♠ flop kept the larger pocket pair within the lead and Mermelstein didn't improve with the turn either. 

The 5♦ paired the board and had Cukier only one card from scoring the knockout but that final card kept Mermelstein alive. The 4♠ spiked at the river, giving him a whole house and a second life on this LAPT9 Panama Main Event. 

After Mermelstein stacked up his nearly 1,100,000 chip stack, a couple of more hands played out before the general table took their second break of the day. Cukier will head on that break below the chip average, as he's playing 1,700,000. An updated have a look at the counts may be posted shortly. -- WOC

3:58pm: Paez tanks, and tanks, and foldsLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

Just watched a hand lasting on the subject of 10 minutes today. No showdown -- it only reached the turn -- but a tight quantity of drama, nonetheless.

Raul Paez opened for 130,000 from middle position, then it folded to Ruben Suarez within the big blind who made it 275,000 to move. Paez thought two full minutes before calling, and the pair watched the flop come 2♣7♠Q♥.

Suarez checked, and after taking another few minutes Paez bet 190,000, leaving himself about 630,000 behind. Suarez acted immediately, announcing he was all-in, and another tank ensued for Paez.

After several minutes, and with the tournament director counting down the seconds in Spanish because the clock were called, Paez finally let his hand visit keep that 630,000. Suarez, meanwhile, is as much as 2.56 million. --MH

3:44pm: Anderson Blanco eliminated in 7th place ($22,300)Level 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

Anderson Blanco-LAPT Panama-2016-9962.jpg

Anderson Blanco - 7th place

It's been nearly two and a half hours because the last elimination and finally, we're all the way down to our final six. That's because Andres Carrillo just cracked aces not to only extend his chip lead but in addition send Anderson Blanco to the rail in 7th place. 

Action was picked up with Carrillo opening to 155,000 from the cutoff and after two folds, Blanco three-bet to 410,000 from the massive blind. Carrillo got a count after which called, only to look Blanco, after some thought, shove the T♣9♠7♦ flop for 910,000. 

The all-in was slightly under a pot-sized bet and Carrillo needed a while to determine. Eventually, he called and while he didn't love to see Blanco's A♦A♣, he was in decent shape with 8♣8♦. His pair had flopped an open ended straight draw, a draw that came in very quickly at the turn. 

The 6♣ left Blanco drawing to 2 outs for a chop however the 4♣ wasn't one in every of them, meaning he was officially eliminated. He'll make $22,300 for his final table run and Andres Carrillo is now playing with regards to 4,100,000, good for the chip lead at this LAPT9 Panama final table. -- WOC

3:29pm: Preflop pokerLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

We're amid a straight of raise-and-take hands, with out a flops and comparatively little chip movement. 

An exception to the pattern saw leader Andres Carrillo raise from middle position to 125,000, then Ruben Suarez installed a three-bet to 325,000 from the blinds, eventually forcing a fold from Carrillo. But then came Austin Peck raising from the hijack to 120,000, Paul Cukier reraising from the small ignorant of 325,000, and a fold from Peck, thereby starting a brand new pattern.

Carrillo remains to be the leader, while Aaron Mermelstein is the present short stack with about 850,000 -- a bit of over 14 big blinds. --MH

3:17pm: Risotto done, Ruben shovesLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

Update at the blogger's lunch, my chicken risotto is finished and Martin is halfway through his. Update at the poker, it has been slow during the last half-hour. 

Ruben Suarez has fallen under the 1,000,000 chip mark early in Level 28 but he's now back over that threshold after you have a shove through. Aaron Mermelstein opened to 130,000 from early position and Suarez, at the button, three-bet all-in for 875,000. Mermelstein thought for a couple of moments before folding, electing not to play for the easier a part of half his stack. 

Suarez is now playing with regards to 15 big blinds, while Mermelstein is near 20 bigs. -- WOC

3:14pm: Carrillo check-folds, then check-raisesLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

The last two hands was a battle of opposites. Andres Carrillo is on the top of the leaderboard and Austin Peck is near the ground and they've swapped blows in back to back encounters to lead to a small net win for the Columbian chip leader. 

Action was picked up within the first hand with Carrillo opening to 125,000 from the hijack and after a fold, Peck three-bet to 270,000 from the button. The blinds folded and Carrillo called, only to check-fold the A♠3♠2♦ flop to a Peck continuation bet. 

In the very next hand, Carrillo opened to 125,000 and Peck called within the cutoff. The 2 players saw a J♦4♣3♠ flop and Carrillo checked, with Peck taking the betting lead with a 140,000 chip wager. Carrillo had other plans though, check-raising to 340,000 to position the pressure at the short stack.

Peck folded and Carrillo took the pot to extend his final table chip lead. He's as much as 2,750,000 while Peck is down near the 1,100,000 chip mark. -- WOC

Andres Carrillo-LAPT Panama-2016-9961.jpg

Andres the giant

3:08pm: Carrillo cruises into leadLevel 28 - Blinds 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)

Sitting to the left of Raul Paez has worked out quite well for Andres Currillo this afternoon. With seven players left he was seventh in chips, but now as a brand new level begins he's ascended the entire way into first position. Updated counts below. --MH

        Name Country Chips
Andres Carrillo Colombia 2,680,000
Paul Cukier Costa Rica 2,050,000
Anderson Blanco Colombia 1,580,000
Raul Paez Spain 1,300,000
Austin Peck USA 1,275,000
Aaron Mermelstein USA 1,225,000
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 985,000
LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
28 30,000 60,000 10,000

2:55pm: Mermelstein flexes his new stackLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Aaron Mermelstein returned from the last break because the shortest stack of the rest seven players but after a double, and a few other vicotries, he's back up near the chip average. He just flexed those newly won chips, shoving over a Paul Cukier open.

Cukier raised to 105,000 from the hijack and after some folds, Mermelstein three-bet shoved for 1,185,000. Cukier thought for a couple of seconds after which peered at his cards a handful of times. We saw them, the tournament staff them, the rail saw them but Mermelstein didn't, so we cannot divulge what he had. 

Eventually, he folded and Mermelstein, as he was taking within the pot, asked, "YOU WILL HAVE a couple"? Curiek answered with a facet to side shake of his head, before saying it was a "flip". Curiek didn't wish to flip for 1/2 his stack, as he's working with regards to 2,200,000 heading towards the tip of Level 27. -- WOC

2:42pm: Carrillo collects from PaezLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Raul Paez is not any longer the chip leader, having lost the result in Paul Crukier following a hand against the hard-charging Andres Carrillo.

It began with Paez opening for 110,000 from the hijack and Carrillo calling from the cutoff. The flop came 5♠9♠5♣, and Paez continued for 120,000. Carrillo called. The turn then brought the T♠ and a check from Paez, and Carrillo took the hole to fireplace a chance of 160,000. Paez thought of it, then called.

The river brought the J♦. Paez checked again, and this time Carrillo set out a gamble of 300,000. Paez hemmed and hawed for almost a minute, then finally tossed out chips to name. Carrillo then quickly showed his hand -- K♠J♠ for a flush -- and Paez mucked. 

That one pushes Carrillo as much as 2.09 million, while Paez slips to 1.58 million. --MH

2:34pm: Mermelstein doubles through SuarezLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Ruben Suarez opened with a raise to 105,000 from middle position, and it folded around to Aaron Mermelstein within the big blind who reraise-shoved for 620,000 total. Suarez called the push, showing K♠J♣, while Mermelstein tabled 6♥6♣.

The board ran out 8♣5♦3♦4♥A♠, meaning the sixes held and Mermelstein doubled as much as 1.27 million. Suarez now has 935,000, having tumbled back to 935,000. --MH

2:29pm: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart Burn CardLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Martin Harris is lots of items. He's a blogger, some would even consider him a reporter actually, he's a faculty professor, he's a musician but most importantly, he's a poker innovator. While it is not offered at the SCOOP schedule or as a bracelet event on the WSOP, yet, Harris has recently devised a variant of Badugi called 'Sgt. Pepper'.

Where the most efficient hand in Badugi is ace to four with all four suits, in 'Sgt. Pepper' the most efficient hand is ace to four with one, less lonely, heart. The remainder of your cards can also be any suit and so far, through the games we've played, I've yet to make a qualifying hand. Martin has, beating me out of a few chocolates earlier this weekend, and whilst you is also wondering why we're telling you this, it is because the 6♥ was just exposed pre flop.

It wbecause then tabled and kept as the burn card, although we never saw a flop. Austin Peck opened the cutoff to 105,000 and took down the blinds and antes however the lonely burn card was meaningful to us, although it may not was to the remainder of the tournament. -- WOC

2:26pm: Blanco versus the AmericansLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Anderson Blanco was aggressive at this final table and most of that aggression have been within the type of pre flop raises and re-raises. Most of these re-raises have come against the 2 Americans to his immediate right and Austin Peck was the newest victim. 

Peck opened to 105,000 from the cutoff and Blanco, at the button, three-bet to 235,000. After the blinds folded, Peck counted out his remaining 950,000 and after a snappy trip to the tank, he folded. He's now below seven-figures for the primary time today, while Blanco is over the chip average. -- WOC

2:21pm: Mermelstein versus the worldLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

On one of the vital first hands back from the break, Aaron Mermelstein open-raised all-in for 625,000 from middle position. It took a while, but eventually the table folded and he secured the blinds and antes.

"You guys aren't making it easy," said Mermelstein with a smile as he collected the pot. "I WILL NOT even see a flop with you guys!"

On the following hand Mermelstein watched Raul Paez open from late position, then Mermelstein three-bet and earned the pot.

Then at the one after that, Paul Cukier opened for 105,000 and it folded to Mermelstein who made it 240,000 to head. Cukier then announced he was all-in, and Mermelstein needed to fold again.

The two-time WPT champ is sitting on about 790,000 right now, still looking to build that stack back up again. --MH

Aaron Mermeltein-LAPT Panama-2016-9973.jpg

Mermelstein battling

2:09pm: Play resumes; 7 remainLevel 27 - Blinds 25,000/50,000 (ante 5,000)

Players are back and the primary hand of Level 27 is being dealt. Raul Paez held steady during that level to take care of the lead, Paul Cukier is closing in, and Aaron Mermelstein has slipped behind the remainder of the pack. Updated counts below. --MH

        Name Country Chips
Raul Paez Spain 2,510,000
Paul Cukier Costa Rica 2,435,000
Ruben Suarez Venezuela 1,460,000
Anderson Blanco Colombia 1,445,000
Andres Carrillo Colombia 1,385,000
Austin Peck USA 1,365,000
Aaron Mermelstein USA 555,000
LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
27 25,000 50,000 5,000

1:50pm: Break time

Though that last hand continued well into it, players now still have among the 15-minute break. --MH

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1:49pm: Peck folds, Cukier chips up before breakLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

The last hand of Level 26 was likely essentially the most meaningful hand of the level, as Paul Cukier shoved the turn and Austin Peck made potentially, if he was correct, the fold of the tournament. Action was picked up with Peck opening to 85,000 from under the gun and after Anderson Blanco called because the next player to act, Cukier three-bet from the cutoff. 

The raise weighed in at 254,000 and after some folds, Peck called and Blanco folded to send two to the flop. Peck check-called 275,000 at the A♥8♥5♦ flop and after the 8♦ fell at the turn, he checked for a second time. 

Cukier took a while to count out his remaining 1,200,000 chip stack after which verbalized "all-in". With 1,300,000 in front of him, the shove was roughly for Peck's tournament life to boot and after just about two minutes of thought, he begrudgingly folded A♥Q♦ face up. 

While the remainder of the overall table shot from their seats to start out break, Peck stayed to access the wear and tear that hand had done to his stack. He's now under the chip average for the primary time today, while Cukier is up near 2,400,000 heading towards the primary 15-minute recess of just today 4 session. 

An update of the chip counts might be posted shortly. -- WOC

Paul Cukier-LAPT Panama-2016-9946.jpg

Cukier collecting

1:44pm: Carrillo calls Suarez's barrelLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

Ruben Suarez was pretty active to this point but that activity just got him in a bit trouble against Andres Carrillo. The Columbian picked off the Venezuelan's river bluff to continue his climb up the overall table leaderboard. 

Ruben Suarez-LAPT Panama-2016-9950.jpg

South bound Suarez

Action was picked up with Carrillo defending his big blind and check-calling a 55,000 chip bet on a K♥8♦2♦ flop. The 3♥ fell at the turn and both players checked and Carrillo tapped the table for a 3rd time after the 9♦ completed the board. Suarez then reverted back to his aggressive ways, betting 205,000. 

It was a pot sized bet and with just about 850,000 in front of him, it represented nearly 1 / 4 of Carrillo's remaining stack. He thought for a minute after which called, before seeing his opponent table A♦Q♥. Carrillo answered with K♣9♣ and his rivered two pair was good to take the pot and move towards the chip average. -- WOC

1:39pm: Caution is the wordLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

It's been relatively quiet over the past 10 minutes or in order Level 26 continues.

We've seen Ruben Suarez defend his blind versus an Aaron Mermelstein button raise, then check-raise the flop to win a pot, showing second pair as he did. Mermelstein has slipped to around 760,000 now, having become the fast stack.

Raul Paez opened the following hand to win the blinds and antes.  The next hand after that saw the fast stack Andres Carrillo open for 100,000 from middle position, then Ruben Suarez three-bet to 220,000 from the small blind. When the action returned to Carrillo he thought for approximately a minute, then folded to maintain his stack of about 910,000. 

There are about 10 minutes to move until the top of the extent and the primary break of the day. --MH

1:29pm: Peck picks one up against chip leaderLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

Since the elimination of Alcides Gomez, it has been relatively quiet. Tactical play is the secret and while Raul Paez remains to be the chip leader, he was just reduce in a contemporary pot. He opened to 85,000 from the cutoff and Austin Peck defended his big ignorant of see a Q♦7♠4♣ flop. 

Peck check-called 80,000 and after the 3♣ fell at the turn, both players checked. The 2♦ completed the board and Peck then took the betting lead, pushing out 130,000. The chips barely crossed the road before Paez sent his hand into the muck, conceding the pot to his American counterpart. 

As mentioned, Paez remains to be leading, playing with reference to 2,700,000 but Peck has had a fair begin to this LAPT9 Panama final table, as he's up near 1,650,000. -- WOC

1:21pm: Carrillo chips up via shoveLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

Andres Carrillo came in as one of the crucial shortest stacks at this LAPT9 Panama final table and while he's been relatively quiet, he's now up and over the 1,000,000-chip mark upon getting a shove through. Action was picked up with Ruben Suarez opening to 80,000 from the cutoff and after chip leader Raul Paez called within the small blind, Carrillo shoved from the big. 

The Columbian's stack weighed in at 877,000 and Suarez appeared like he had a choice to make. He spent with reference to two minutes in tank but couldn't discover a call, electing to fold to the fast stacked shoved. Paez only needed a couple of seconds to fold and Carrillo then stacked over seven figures for the primary time on this tournament. -- WOC

Andres Carrillo-LAPT Panama-2016-9966.jpg

Carrillo at the comeback trail

1:17pm: Chip leader versus short stackLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

Since the elimination of Alcides Gomez earlier, Andres Carrillo was the quick stack a number of the final seven. 

Carrillo open-raised all-in once a little while ago, but got no callers. On a hand shortly after that one, chip leader Raul Paez (on Carrillo's right) opened for 85,000 from the hijack, and after thinking some time Carrillo called from the cutoff, leaving himself about 550,000 behind.

The flop came 5♠T♠Q♦, and Paez continued for 83,000. Carrillo sat quietly about 20 seconds, then announced he was raising all-in and Paez quickly let his hand go.

Carrillo has about 790,000 now, and remains to be seventh of 7. --MH

1:06pm: Cukier check-raise earns potLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

Aaron Mermelstein raised to 90,000 from middle position and it folded around to Paul Cukier who called from the massive blind. 

The flop came 4♦3♣K♠ and Cukier checked. Mermelstein continued for 60,000, and Cukier called. The turn brought the T♦ and another check from Cukier, and this time Mermelstein fired 110,000. Cukier took a couple of half-minute, then check-raised to 270,000. Mermelstein studied the placement for a brief while, then tossed his hand away. 

Cukier is as much as 1.83 million and in second position now behind Raul Paez while Mermelstein slips to 1.19 million. --MH

12:59pm: Introducing the chip leaderLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

The action was centered across the aggressive Americans and Anderson Blanco but a couple of minutes into Level 26, chip leader Raul "El Toro" Paez announced himself to the sphere. That hand was picked up with Blanco opening to 80,000 from under the gun and after a couple of folds, Paez called within the cutoff. 

Austin Peck came along within the big blind and he then checked the 6♣4♦2♠ flop. Blanco continued for 75,000 and Paez called before Peck called besides. All three saw the board pair at the turn with the 6♥ and after Peck and Blanco checked, Paez took the betting lead with a 180,000 chip wager. 

Both players folded and "El Toro" increased his chip lead with the primary victory of just today 4 session. He's now playing with regards to 2,700,000. -- WOC

12:51pm: Blanco, Blanco, BlancoLevel 26 - Blinds 20,000/40,000 (ante 5,000)

The blinds and antes have gone up and so has Anderson Blanco's stack. The Columbian has won the previous couple of pots to extend his standing and announce himself to this final table in a large way. 

The first hand saw Austin Peck open to 65,000 from the hijack and Blanco, within the cutoff, three-bet to 134,000. Peck called after which check-folded at the 6♠3♦2♠ flop to a 223,000 chip bet.  

The next hand didn't make it to a flop, as Aaron Mermelstein opened to 60,000 and Blanco three-bet to 187,000 from the hijack. Mermelstein quickly folded and Blanco showed A♥K♥ before taking within the pot.

He wasn't done picking at the Americans though, taking another pot from Mermelstein after the Philadelphia native check-folded to a 165,000 chip bet on a K♠J♥5♠ flop. Once his run was over, Blanco stacked up just over 1,600,000, pushing himself above the chip average for the primary time since midway through Day 3. -- WOC

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
26 20,000 40,000 5,000

12:38pm: Alcides Gomez eliminated in 8th place ($15,440)Level 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

Short stack Alcides Gomez open-raised all-in once from middle position and got no callers, then did so again at the next hand and it folded around to Austin Peck within the small blind.

Peck paused, then said he was calling the frenzy by Gomez, worth about 555,000. Anderson Blanco quickly tossed his hand clear of the massive blind, and the players tabled their hands:

Peck: K♠K♦Gomez: A♥J♣

Bad news for Gomez, and five cards later it was worse, because the 4♠Q♠7♣4♦7♥ runout didn't help him and he exits in eighth place.

Alcides Gomez-LAPT Panama-2016-9835.jpg

Alcides Gomez - 8th place

Peck is now up around 1.84 million.--MH

12:31pm: Austin powers (again)Level 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

Austin Peck raised again to 65,000 from UTG, Raul Paez called from the button, and Aaron Mermelstein also referred to as from the large blind.

The flop came 4♥8♠A♠ and all three players checked. Then after the 6♣ turn, Mermelstein bet 85,000, then Peck raised to 260,000. Paez quickly folded, and after thinking a little while Mermelstein tossed his hand away also, doing so face up and showing he had A♥J♥.

Austin Eric Peck-LAPT Panama-2016-9958.jpg

If Austin Peck picked up a peck of poker pots, what number of poker pots did Austin Peck pick up?

Peck is back as much as 1.26 million while Mermelstein has 1.69 million. --MH

12:28pm: Suarez takes from PeckLevel 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

Austin Peck continues to stay active within the early going here on the final table, and again he encountered some resistance from Ruben Suarez.

Peck opened for 65,000 from middle position and got two callers in Suarez (cutoff) and Raul Paez (big blind). The flop came 2♥J♥6♠, and after Paez checked, Peck continued for 71,000. Suarez quickly raised to 155,000, Paez folded, and after slightly thought Peck called.

The turn brought the 7♣ and a check from Peck, and when Suarez fired 225,000, Peck let his hand go. Suarez bumps as much as 1.91 million while Peck has 1.08 million --MH

12:15pm: Peck and Suarez clash againLevel 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

Austin Peck and Ruben Suarez are quickly mastering one another at this LAPT9 Panama final table. The 2 just got enthusiastic about a pre flop leveling war and their next battle made it's solution to the river, starting with an Austin Peck 65,000 chip open from the hijack. 

Suarez called at the button and while Alcides Gomez looked desirous about the large blind, he folded to send two players to the flop. Peck led the Q♠T♠7♣ board for 57,000 and Suarez called to peer the 2♣ fall at the turn. Both players checked and the 2♥ paired the board at the river, bringing another check from Peck. 

Suarez wasn't going to reflect that action though, as he bet 110,000. Peck thought for a couple of moments after which called, only to be shown Q♥8♦. Suarez's hand was good and after their second battle, Suarez was back up and over the 1,500,000 chip mark, while Peck has dropped just below that number. -- WOC

12:13pm: Four-bet alert!Level 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

The first few hands of this restart were relatively uneventful but after a slow start, the primary four-bet on the LAPT9 Panama final table saw Austin Peck pick up a tight pot. Action was picked up with Peck opening to 65,000 from the cutoff and after a fold, Ruben Suarez three-bet to 140,000. 

The big blind folded and after some thought, Peck cut out a raise. He pushed 340,000 around the line for a four-bet and while Suarez spent a minute within the tank, he eventually folded to concede the pot to the youngest player at this final table. When the dust settled, Peck was playing with reference to 1,500,000 and Suarez had dropped slightly to 1,350,000. -- WOC

Final Table-LAPT Panama-2016-9938.jpg

The LAPT9 Panama Main Event final table begins

12:10pm: Play beginsLevel 25 - Blinds 15,000/30,000 (ante 4,000)

The final table has begun! Again, a reminder of where people are seated and the stacks to start:

         Seat Name Country Chips
1 Austin Peck USA 1,351,000
2 Anderson Blanco Colombia 1,225,000
3 Ruben Suarez Venezuela 1,477,000
4 Paul Cukier Costa Rica 1,341,000
5 Alcides Gomez USA 562,000
6 Raul Paez Spain 2,580,000
7 Andres Carrillo Colombia 659,000
8 Aaron Mermelstein USA 1,802,000

There are about 36 minutes left to move in Level 25. --MH

LEVEL SMALL BLIND BIG BLIND ANTE
25 15,000 30,000 4,000

11:30am: Final table player profiles

From 553 entries just eight players remain with an opportunity to become the following LAPT Main Event champion. Play gets underway in about half an hour, which provides you tons of time to get to understand the general eight with these quick introductions:

Seat 1: Austin Peck, USA -- 1,351,000

Though he won't be turning 21 until this August, Austin Peck has already had various experience on the tournament tables where he's been collecting cashes steadily for the last couple of years playing in places where the playing age is eighteen and up. 

In america he's cashes on several different tours, the highlight coming this February when he won a WSOP Circuit ring in an event at West Palm Beach. A FEW weeks after that he finished 20th on the earth Poker Tour Fallsview Poker Classic Main Event in Niagara Falls, then last month earned a career-high cash of $24,467 by final-tabling the WPT DeepStacks event in Jacksonville, Florida where he finished fifth. Taking sixth or better today will exceed that total. --MH

Seat 2: Anderson Blanco, Colombia -- 1,225,000

One of 2 Colombians at today's final table, Anderson Blanco carried the chip lead into yesterday's Day 3, fell back to short-stacked status for a lot of the afternoon, then successfully climbed back to have an almost-average stack to begin today's final table. Blanco has already guaranteed himself a career-high score today, wherever he finishes. He also has topped his previous highest finish in an LAPT Main Event, a 19th-place showing at LAPT5 Colombia. --MH

Seat 3: Ruben Suarez, Venezuela -- 1,477,000

Ruben Suarez is the 13th Venezuelan player to make an LAPT Main Event final table, and hopes to be the primary of that group to wreck through and claim a title. He has just a couple of cashes on his tournament poker résumé thus far, including a 27th-place finish within the LAPT8 Peru Main Event a year ago. His biggest cash came here in Panama City back in January when he won a $1,000 Jackies Poker Tour event, topping a 235-entry field to earn $48,000. --MH

Seat 4: Paul Cukier, Costa Rica -- 1,341,000

The lone Costa Rican left within the field, Paul Cukier comes from a poker-playing family, as he's the grandson of Max and Maria Stern, the primary husband and wife ever to every win a WSOP bracelet. Cukier has a handful of previous small cashes collected within the USA, on the PCA within the Bahamas, and in San Jose in his native country. His biggest previous cash was for $4,043 for finishing 156th in a WSOP event back in 2012, so he's already assured himself of a career-high payday here in Panama today. --MH

Seat 5: Alcides Gomez, USA -- 562,000

The Miami based pro Alcides Gomez has his justifiable share of ultimate table results and experience including a podium finish from last month's Seminole Hard Rock Poker Challenge Main Event. He'll return today because the low man at the totem pole, playing just over 560,000 and he'll want to spin up a stack if he will notch another podium finish on this LAPT9 Panama Main Event. --WOC

Seat 6: Raul Paez, Spain -- 2,580,000

Raul Paez will return to the overall table because the chip leader. With over $1,800,000 in career earnings, "El Toro" is essentially the most experienced player remaining and he's hoping that the third time can also be the charm at an LAPT final table. The Spaniard finished third on the Main Event final table in Columbia during Season 5, then three years ago bubbled the general table in Panama. --WOC   

Seat 7: Andres Carrillo, Colombia -- 659,000

Andres Carrillo returns as certainly one of two players under the million-chip mark, meaning that the Columbian is often active early at this LAPT9 Panama final table. Carrillo's past tournament results are relatively few and much between, but with scores from around the globe -- including EPT final table finishes in Barcelona and Malta -- if he's capable of finding an early double, he'll be a contender. --WOC

Seat 8: Aaron Mermelstein, USA -- 1,802,000

As we said yesterday, if chip leader Raul Paez is the creme, Aaron Mermelstein is what settles just below the creme. He'll come again second in chips and the two-time World Poker Tour champion might be seeking to make Sortis Hotel, Spa & Casino history today. He currently sits third at the all-time Sortis money list and a deep run today could earn him his best career LAPT finish and move him up that leaderboard. --WOC   

sortis.jpg

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PokerStars Blog Reporting Team at LAPT9 Panama: Will O'Connor and Martin Harris. Photos by Carlos Monti. Follow the PokerStars Blog on Twitter: @PokerStarsBlog



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