WSOP Blog: Cada back in front
November 9, 2009 - 8:49 pm
On the 294rd hand, Joseph Cada retakes the lead with 120.6 million. Darvin Moon drops to 72.2 million.
We may be here a while at the World Series of Poker. Chip leader Joseph Cada’s chip lead shrunk after just a few hands.
On the very first hand of heads-up no-limit hold’em poker at the Rio, Maryland logger Darvin Moon took a sizeable chunk of Cada’s chip stack. After several back and forth sizeable wagers with board showing a pair of kings, Cada’s pocket nines couldn’t hold up to Moon’s pocket queens.
On the 294rd hand, Joseph Cada retakes the lead with 120.6 million. Darvin Moon drops to 72.2 million.
The search continues for a California woman and her 8-month-old daughter who vanished while on their way home after a doctor’s appointment, authorities and family said.
Authorities are investigating why two women fell ill at the Revolution Against Aging and Death Festival. They both received peptide injections as a way to fight aging.
Employees with the Southern Nevada Water Authority benefit from a generous leave-accrual policy.
Under Nevada law, being placed on an emergency mental health crisis hold in a psychiatric hospital is not enough to prevent you from being able to purchase a gun in the future.
Cities in Clark County are working to roll out a multi-jurisdictional business license that will help streamline the process for food truck operators.
Gilbert Arenas was arrested Wednesday along with five other people, including a suspected member of an Israeli organized crime group, on suspicion of hosting illegal high-stakes poker games, federal prosecutors said.
The Federal Reserve left its key short-term interest rate unchanged for the fifth time this year, brushing off repeated calls from President Donald Trump for a cut.
Few comments were received at Tuesday’s virtual scoping meeting, but environmentalists could make their voices heard at Wednesday’s Las Vegas meeting.
The dire warnings following the massive quake off Russia’s Kamchatka peninsula evoked memories of catastrophic damage caused by tsunamis over the last quarter-century.
Details about Shane Tamura’s life have emerged after the Las Vegas man fatally shot four people in a New York City skyscraper before turning his gun on himself.