One day after torching off $600,000 on Hustler Casino Live, Eric Persson took one on the chin in the form of a brutal $290,000 cooler against Eric Hicks on Live at the Bike.
On Thursday, Persson exited the game following a failed bluff in a $478,000 pot against the loose Alan Keating. The following day, he didn't bluff off a stack, but instead ran into a difficult and costly situation.
The final Phil Hellmuth Week show on Live at the Bike brought out more than double the audience of the first two nights, thanks in large part to the lineup, which included Los Angeles high-stakes legend Garrett Adelstein, Phil Hellmuth, Persson, and Poker Hall of Famer Eli Elezra.
According to our sources within LATB, the Friday show reached 5,000 average concurrent viewers between YouTube, Facebook, and Twitch. Those tuned in were treated to many exciting hands during the five-hour session, but none more entertaining than a hand played between Hicks and Persson.
Sometimes You Don't Want to Hit Your Draw
Hitting a flush draw, especially a king-high one, on the turn is quite a pleasant feeling for any poker player. Well, not always. Take, for example, the following hand in which Persson's joy upon hitting his draw turned quickly to sorrow.
With ♦️a
"Oh, Eric, this is going to be on YouTube, my friend," Persson accurately predicted as he pondered his next move. "There's no f*****g way you can get off this hand."
Persson, owner of Maverick Gaming casinos, opted to lead out for $3,100, an unconventional play in today's poker world. Hicks, sitting pretty with a set of aces, raised to $10,000 and received a call.
The turn, the a♠️
With action first on Persson, Hellmuth's newest rival, the tank-top wearing, trash-talking casino owner who hit his flush bet out again, this time for $31,000, more than the size of the pot. Hicks, with no reason to scare off his opponent, gave it the old big-hand sigh before making the call.
The river was a meaningless 7♥️
"Do you have a full house?" Persson asked.
He didn't have a full house, but instead quad aces, and he took down a pot of $289,700. Persson would battle back to end the session down $98,000. Not exactly the outcome he was hoping for before the game began, but it could have been worse. Hicks, on the other hand, won $34,000 for the night after being stuck around $100,000 early.