Robert Williamson III completed with a
, and Rep Porter asked how much he was playing (90,000) before making a raise to two bets with an
. Williamson called.
On fourth street, Williamson showed 
, and he checked. Porter's board was 
, and he bet. Williamson called, and they went ahead and put the last 15,000 in there and turned up the cards. Williamson started with 
/ 
, and Porter was working with 
/ 
.
Porter's board ran out 
/ 



, and his ten-low was the hand to beat. With his first six cards out, Williamson was showing 
/ 


, and he was drawing live to survive. "I need to beat a ten?" he asked rhetorically. "All right, I'm gonna squeeze this one."
He did just that, finally ripping open a
. That gave him a ten-eight, the best hand, and the double up. He's back to 207,000 now, knocking Porter down a peg to about 400,000.