There’s nothing like an all in showdown in poker, and in this insane hand from EPT Prague in 2015, one player’s preflop shove triggered an avalanche of all ins in a wild four-player megapot.
TOP 5 MOST AMAZING POKER HANDS EVER SEEN!Help us to 200K Subscribers - Turn on the '🔔' to get notifications for new uploads!If you are. World’s most reliable random number generator (RNG) certificate for poker sites to provide players with fair and random play. RUN TWO TIMES Players can chose to run 2 flops, turns or rivers, when all in against oponent who share their run two times preference. 4 of the most INSANE Poker Action Turn Cards! Help us to 200K Subscribers - Follow us: Twitter: https://twitter.com/officialfurytv. Turn card is a seven lamb still way ahead, but Jerry picks up a straight up. And probable finals bumping heads and poker's biggest arena. Jerry's wife, Sue most anxious right now And Jerry holding a picture of their kids in his hands to knock them out and end. This thing will need an eight or a six for a straight The River card.
Chris Walker, the first to act at the table with just under a million in chips, decided to go all in holding pocket Jacks.
Marc MacDonnell, with only a few blinds left in his short stack and 8-9 of diamonds, also pushed all in.
Then things got interesting. Ilkin Amirov, with just over six million, called. Two more players got out of the way, but Javier Gomez shoved in his 2,590,000 with pocket Queens. Amirov, who happened to have the best hand at the table with pocket Kings, wasted little time in calling to create a second huge sidepot in addition to the main pot.
After every player flipped, Amirov was a 52 percent favorite – but after a flop of three spades, 6-9-Ace, Javier Gomez took a slight lead with a flush draw.
A two of diamonds on the turn only helped Amirov, who needed to avoid Gomez’s flush on the river or a set for MacDonnell or Walker.
The room was dead silent for the flop – which was a brutal card for three men at the table. The dealer flipped a six of diamonds on the river, and Amirov’s pocket Kings were good enough to knock three opponents out of the tournament. He won 3,820,000 million chips on the hand, and would go on to finish third, good for a payday of €391,910.
We’re no longer in poker’s golden age of the mid-2000’s, but the game still has the potential to thrill and captivate us. While Chris Moneymaker’s win in the 2003 World Series of Poker may have inspired us all to get in the game, this compilation might just have the opposite effect. When you see all the unbelievable ways in which a perfectly-played hand can go wrong, why would you ever want to risk money on the game again?
Take the epic that starts at the 5:57 mark, a hand that starts out between Valentin Vornicu, Shaun Deeb and James Obst. Deeb and Obst both have great chances at straights, but Vornicu flops top two pair. As the turn comes, Obst gets a flush with a chance for a straight flush, but Vornicu gets a full house. Any way you slice it, Obst has a great hand with a chance for an all-timer, but it just is never good enough, and Vornicu takes him for nearly a million dollars’ worth of chips. The sickest part of it is that Obst had to be pretty sure he was beaten, but how do you just walk away from a flush?
Poker can be torture to play, but it is sure fun to watch when it’s this nuts.