
The blinds are still 200,000-400,000 with a 50,000 ante.
Hand #47 – Jon Cohen raises from the cutoff to 850,000, and Ray Piccin calls from the button. The flop comes 

, Cohen bets 1,000,000, and Piccin calls.
The turn is the
, Cohen bets 1,700,000, and Piccin calls.
The river pairs the board with the
, Cohen bets 3,200,000, and Piccin moves all in for 6,580,000. Cohen folds, and Piccin takes the pot.
Ray Piccin – 17,700,000 (44 bb)
Jon Cohen – 22,400,000 (56 bb)
The blinds increase to 250,000-500,000 with a 75,000 ante. Play continues without a break.
Hand #48 – Bryan Campanello moves all in from the cutoff for about 5 million, and Darren Rabinowitz moves all in over the top from the button for 7,325,000. In the big blind, Jon Cohen asks for a count of Rabinowitz’s chip before he calls as well.
Here are their cards, in descending order of chip counts:
Jon Cohen: 

Darren Rabinowitz: 

Bryan Campanello: 

The board comes 



, and the pocket aces hold up for Rabinowitz to win the pot and double thru Cohen while eliminating Campanello in fifth place.
Darren Rabinowitz – 19,800,000 (39 bb)
Jon Cohen – 14,900,000 (29 bb)
Bryan Campanello – Out in 5th Place ($85,150)
5th place but was a fun run! Excited for the 5k coming up! Thanks for all the support
— Bryan Campanello (@b_campanello45) August 19, 2013
The next hand (Hand #49), Cohen plays a smaller pot against Piccin, and loses about 5 million in chips.
Jon Cohen – 10,000,000 (20 bB)
Ray Piccin – 22,500,000 (45 bb)



, Cohen checks, Campanello bets 700,000, and Cohen calls. The turn is the
, Cohen bets 3,600,000, and Campanello calls. Cohen shows 

, and Rabinowitz turns over [9c9h] — a race situation.


, and the pocket nines hold up for Rabinowitz to win the pot and eliminate Freedman in eighth place.



.



for a missed straight draw (king high), and Darrell double-checks his hand before turning over [Qd8d] to win the pot with a diamond flush.


— Campanello flops a double-gutshot straight draw and turns a pair, but the pocket jacks hold up for Barnhart to double up in chips.



for a pair of nines, and it appears to be good and Darrell studies his own hand without showing it.

, Miller checks, Zamani bets 480,000, and Miller calls. The turn is the
for a pair of fours, but Miller turns over 

, and he’ll need to improve to stay alive.