Dunlop Can Afford to Lose
First of all he got himself involved from the button with William Martin in the cutoff. They made it to the end of the board and Martin checked. Dunlop checked behind, and turned over for two pair -- and everyone was most surprised when Martin turned over for a sneakily-played full house that never got paid off.
A few hands later, Dunlop doubled up Anthony Roux when his failed to hit against Roux's pocket fours.
Nevertheless, the 480,000 that Dunlop is left with still represents roughly a 2:1 chip lead over anyone else in the tournament.