2014 Borgata Winter Poker Open

$3 Million Guaranteed WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship
Day: 3
Event Info

2014 Borgata Winter Poker Open

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q3
Prize
$842,379
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,300
Entries
1,229
Level Info
Level
39
Blinds
300,000 / 600,000
Ante
75,000

Merulla Busts Panayiotou

Level 24 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Robert Merulla on Day 3 of the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship
Robert Merulla on Day 3 of the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship

Robert Merulla is on a tear lately, crippling Matthew Mendez by winning a coin flip before making a full house with pocket kings and getting extreme value from Matthew Parry.

He kept the heater going in a recent hand with Eracles Panayiotou's.

Merulla opened for 42,000 from middle position and Panayiotou decided to three-bet for about half his stack, making it 115,000 to go and leaving only 126,000 behind. This is when Merulla began to set his trap, sitting for thirty seconds or so and acting as if he had a tough decision to work through. After putting on the disguise of a man disgusted with having to put the chips forward, Merulla moved a stack of hot pink T25000 chips forward.

A pot-committed Panayiotou snap-called with his {a-Hearts}{q-Clubs} but was shocked to discover Merulla hid a secret in the hole: {a-Diamonds}{a-Spades}.

"You had to think about it that long huh?" asked Panayiotou, not pleased with the deceptive play being used against him even though everybody at the table knew his chips were going in the middle the moment he three-bet.

The flop came down {9-Hearts}{10-Spades}{5-Diamonds} and Panayiotou asked for a jack to come on fourth street, searching for additional outs that never came. When the turn came {9-Spades} his tournament was over, and the meaningless {4-Hearts} completed the board on the river.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Anthony Merulla us
Anthony Merulla
2,356,000
256,000
256,000
Profile photo of Eracles Panayiotou us
Eracles Panayiotou
Busted

Tags: Eracles PanayiotouRobert Merulla