Slight problem for Steven Ducharme, who bet out on the river of a board only to be quickly called by Thuy Quach. Ducharme had had to bluff with but unfortunately Quach had overquads, holding .
Quach has 21,000 but Ducharme is the chip leader on the table with 25,000 still.
We were speaking to Scott O'Reilly, who very much is a fan of the structure, comparing it favourably to the main event, liking the high number of hands per hour though he would've liked antes in the tournament.
He's still on 9,900 at the moment.
All tables still have at least five players playing on them with a couple still having a full compliment of nine players.
Over on the James Keys table, the eight players are playing the show one card game if you win the pot. They've also been the first to lose a player after someone ran into .
It looks as though the tournament is going to have to be restarted with all chip counts reset to their starting stacks. Several players have come over to Pokernews, very unimpressed out that some players on their tables had stacks of up to 19,000 and are now losing out.
"Someone could have been knocked out," said James Keys, inferring that they'd have a full stack again from this restart. Others are apparently going to ask for their buy-in back.
The tournament has now restarted, but it remains to be seen how happy those playing this event are with this decision.