On Tuesday, the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event continued airing on ESPN. Day 5 was featured and Jonathan Lane held down the chip lead when PocketFives tuned in at the start of the second hour of coverage.

The action was entertaining from the get-go, as Yimin Fang, while still unpacking chips from his rack at the feature table, committed most of them on a flop of Q-8-7 with Q-10. Jonathan Jaffe, who won his second PokerStars WCOOP title on Monday, had aces in the hand, prompting Fang to yell, “I love lady. Lady come in. Please lady, lady, lady.” There was no “lady” anywhere to be found, as a jack and a five hit to give Jaffe a double up. Fang promptly doubled another player up, this time holding Q-10 against A-K.

PartyPokerpro Marvin Rettenmaier was all-in pre-flop with pocket kings and up against queens. His opponent found a queen on the flop, but Rettenmaier re-sucked on the turn when a king hit. The river, however, chopped the pot and both players emitted a huge sigh.

Poker pro JC Tran(pictured), armed with A-K of hearts and an 888 Poker patch, called an all-in against a player who had pocket queens for a race. The board ran out J-J-7-K-3 and Tran raked a pot worth 1.4 million in chips on Day 5.

Back at the feature table, the focus went to Jaffe, who moonlights as a dolphin trainer at Sea World. Footage of Jaffe feeding dolphins ensued, with the poker pro telling the at-home audience, “It’s quite a grind becoming a dolphin trainer… Dolphins are smarter than some poker players.” Jaffe splits time between Sea World in Orlando and grinding online poker in Montreal.

Fang’s magical ride in the WSOP Main Event came crashing down at the hands of David Benefield, who knocked him out with J-J against A-5. Benefield hit a flush on the turn and had Fang drawing dead on the river. No ladies were spotted.

Elsewhere in the cavernous Amazon Room at the Rio in Las Vegas, Grayson gray31Ramage (pictured) busted a player while holding J-J against K-K after spiking a jack on the river. Ramage was unemotional throughout the hand and continued to climb the leaderboard. Then, another suckout occurred as 2012 WSOP bracelet winner Ronnie Bardah, armed with A-A, was all-in pre-flop against K-10 of clubs. Runner-runner clubs sent Bardah to the rails. You might recall that Bardah finished 24th in the 2010 WSOP Main Event.

To close out the second one-hour episode on ESPN on Tuesday, Jaffe scooped a pot worth 2.4 million in chips after making a flush to crack aces. He continued his dominant Day 5 run in the world’s largest poker tournament.

Next week, the action starts at 9:30pm Eastern Time on Tuesday on ESPN with more hands from Day 5. If you missed this week’s episodes, replays air fairly often on ESPN’s family of stations. Check your local listings for more details.

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