All-In Confusion
A few hands later, Andrei Gladyshev and Jenya Gavrilovich faced off again. Gladyshev raised from early position to 900,000, and Gavrilovich put his chips in, although neither he nor the dealer announced an all-in. Everyone else folded to Gladyshev, and Gavrilovich revealed his cards Q?10?, as did Gladyshev A?2?.
The board revealed 2?Q?8?J?6?, and the dealer counted Gavrilovich's chips, which amounted to 950,000 - 50,000 more than Gladyshev's raise. The dealer asked Gladyshev for the additional 50,000, leading to confusion. Since there was no official all-in announcement, and Gladyshev hadn't called, the floor needed to clarify the situation. Ultimately, the floor ruled that since Gladyshev had turned his cards, indicating he was willing to play, he accepted the all-in, even though there was no official announcement from the dealer.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Andrei Gladyshev |
15,100,000
-1,050,000
|
-1,050,000 |
Jenya Gavrilovich |
2,800,000
-900,000
|
-900,000 |