Minutes later, he’d double up two times and put himself right back in contention before finishing the day with 115,000. Marchese tabled the best hand and quadrupled up. The button and both blinds called, and then all three active players checked it down as the board ran out. In Level 4 with the blinds at 100/200/25, Marchese was down to just 3,350 when he got it all in from the cutoff holding the. Shooting Star Tom Marchese had an interesting day, one that started off badly. Eriquezzo was eliminated, but unfortunately for Vaillancourt his victim wasn’t a bounty. That meant he needed either an ace, four or jack on the river to stay alive, but it wasn’t in the cards when the blanked. The flop was no help to Eriquezzo, and neither was the turn. It happened when Eriquezzo was all-in from middle position holding the and was racing against the of Noah Vaillancourt in the cutoff. Shooting Stars Dan Shak and Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier both fell in the first two levels of play (Grospellier would re-enter and finish the day with 112,200), and then reigning World Series of Poker National Championship winner Ryan Eriquezzo joined them on the rail in Level 3 with the blinds at 75/150/25. With all the bounties in play, action was fast and furious.
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