Player mucks winning hand at $1M final table - debate erupts

Dave Woods
Posted on: February 19, 2026 01:27 PST

You always need to be switched on at the poker table, because even the most experienced pros can make costly mistakes.

It was Duey Dong's turn this week at the final table of the LAPC Commerce Classic, a tournament with a $1M guarantee. And the debate on what happened is still reverberating on X

Watch the hand in the video above, or read on for the full breakdown.

'Oh wow, Duey just folded a chop!'

On the very first hand, Erick Ordonez raised to 400,000 with from the hijack. Dong made the call from the small blind with .

Ordonez made a set of queens on the flop, which also gave Dong top pair. Ordonez bet 400K and Dong made the call.

The diamonds kept coming with the dropping on the turn, and Dong decided to take the initiative with a 500K bet, which Ordonez called, creating a pot of 3.2 million.

The river completed the flush on the board, and both players checked. Ordonez flipped his set of queens, and Dong mucked, leading the commentators to say, "Oh wow, Duey just folded a chop!"

The commentary team went on to say how experienced Dong is, especially in the LA scene – "He's not an amateur by any means."

Should the players have spoken up?

Conversation immediately erupted on the final table, with Jared Griener saying he didn't think any other player should say anything. Not everyone agreed, and he followed up with a post on X tagging experienced TD Matt Savage: "Interesting spot here. Huge ft. Experienced player mucks his hand, not realizing it’s a chop. No one says anything before it hits the muck, then players try to chime in, and I say it’s out of line for anyone to say anything."

Derek Kwan argued that ‘cards speak’ should apply. You always want the winning hand or hands to get the chips. 

Savage responded with his take: "It should be one player to a hand, yes, but if another player tells Duey in this case that it’s a flush on the board, then if Duey shows, he does get half the pot. The dealer is taught to kill folded hands, which they do as well, and it is correct. The dealer should not be saying the board plays unless both hands are tabled face up."

Asked if a player not in the hand would be out of line for speaking out, Savage said, "Yes, because it’s not fair for all. Same as if a player called on the river, saw the hand and folds, the dealer should just kill it, and no other player has the right to see the hand except the bettor, and he would be dumb to ask, IMO."

The moral of the story? Pay close attention at all times, and always table your hand if you're not 100% sure. 

And if you think this can’t happen to elite players, think again.

Phil Ivey famously folded a winning pair of eights in the 2009 WSOP Main Event and did it again 10 years later in the 2019 $50K Poker Players Championship. Watch that hand play out below. 

Back at the 2026 LAPC Commerce Classic, Dong rallied after that hand and eventually finished 6th. Ordonez made good use of Dong's chips and finished second for $177,270. 

LAPC Commerce Classic 2026 results

  1. Fausto Valdez – $252,840
  2. Erick Ordonez – $177,270
  3. Phuoc Hong Nguyen – $115,000
  4. Thang Tran – $85,210
  5. Lihao Shen – $64,380
  6. Duey Dong – $52,050
  7. Jared Griener – $42,990
  8. Kevin Khuong – $34,070
  9. Kurt Esbenson – $25,290