It's hard to flop quads. Nevertheless it happens. Getting dealt pocket aces comes somewhat more often, though not all that often either. Unfortunately for U.S. player Peter Nigh, either one of these events just happened at the same hand, and in consequence he's at the rail in 13th place ($9,760).
Following a gap 2x raise by Mexico's Hugo Suarez to 48,000 from the cutoff seat, Peter Nigh three-bet to 115,000 from the blinds and Suarez called.
The first three cards came 4♥4♣6♦, and given our foreshadowing chances are you'll guess what that meant. Nigh led for 80,000 and Suarez called, then the turn brought the 8♦ and another bet from Nigh, this time for 130,000. Suarez called once more.
The river was the 2♦ and Nigh announced he was all in. Suarez called instantly.
Nigh had A♣A♦, natch, a hand one gets dealt just once every 221 hands. But Suarez tabled 4♦4♠, having flopped quads as will only happen about once every 408 times one is dealt a pocket pair.
The odds of both happening in a single hand? Exceedingly slim, though more than the risk of our seeking to figure it out.
They're edging toward the top of Level 24. Twelve remain, and with that hand Suarez leads the overall dozen with greater than 1.4 million.
Photography from LAPT7 Panama by Carlos Monti. Click here for live updates in Spanish, and here for live updates in Portuguese. Also take a look at the start-to-finish live streaming coverage (in both Spanish and Portuguese) at PokerStars.tv.
Martin Harris is Freelance Contributor to the PokerStars Blog.
Read More... [Source: PokerStarsBlog.com :: Latin American Poker Tour]
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