?4,000,000 APPT High Roller
Day 2 Completed
?4,000,000 APPT High Roller
Day 2 Completed
A champion has been crowned in the ?4,000,000 ($3,525) High Roller Event and it was a fitting end to 2019 PokerStars APPT Korea festival at the Paradise City Casino in Incheon, South Korea, which saw all events across the board boost their numbers significantly. Keiji Takahashi led the field as chip leader into the final day and went wire-to-wire to life the trophy after defeating Jian Yang in heads-up.
A quick look on The Hendon Mob reveals no recorded live cash for Takahashi, who considers himself more of a cash game player and was part of a large group of poker enthusiasts from nearby Japan that made the short flight to South Korea. Eight other Japanese players finished in the money including Jun Obara and Kazuhiko Yotsushika, and Takahashi topped them all to claim the PokerStars LIVE trophy and the first-place prize of ?143,890,000 ($126,623).
APPT Korea National champion Yan Li narrowly missed out on an unprecedented third title at an APPT festival and finished in third place, the final table also featured Yongwei Mo, World Series of Poker bracelet winner Calvin Lee and Weiyi "Wayne" Zhang.
The two-day event saw 72 players out of 155 entries return to the table. With the registration open for the first level of the day, a flurry of eliminations, new entries and re-entries boosted the field to 181 entries in total, creating a prize pool of ?649,609,000 ($571,656). The top 27 spots were paid at least ?6,495,000 ($5,716) and Dong Chen, as well as Huijie Zhou, were eliminated on separate tables to let the money bubble burst. As a matter of fact, eventual champion Takahashi called all in on the money bubble, too, and doubled through Yotsushika who ran a gutsy bluff with seven-deuce.
Final Result 2019 PokerStars APPT Korea ?4,000,000 High Roller
Place | Winner | Country | Prize (in KRW) | Prize (in USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Keiji Takahashi | Japan | ?143,890,000 | $126,623 |
2 | Jian Yang | China | ?97,114,000 | $85,460 |
3 | Yan Li | China | ?66,845,000 | $58,824 |
4 | Yongwei Mo | China | ?54,500,000 | $47,960 |
5 | Calvin Lee | United States | ?43,460,000 | $38,245 |
6 | Wayne Zhang | China | ?33,390,000 | $29,383 |
7 | Yasreel Praveen Doddaiavar | India | ?24,295,000 | $21,380 |
8 | Shinryo Nonin | Japan | ?17,605,000 | $15,492 |
9 | Yunye Lu | China | ?14,550,000 | $12,804 |
Action of the Day
With one further level of late registration and re-entry allowed, players arrived and left in quick succession and among those to buy in two more times was also Kazuhiko Yotsushika. Super High Roller finalist Irshat Shaykhov put his hopes on a flush draw and ran into pocket aces just when the registration for the event had officially closed and from there on out, the field was thinned at an alarming pace.
Among the notables that missed out on the money and busted before the dinner break were Natalie Teh, Ken Okada, Nan Hong, Danny Tang, Yuri Ishida, Dong Guo, Short-Deck champion Phachara Wongwichit, Alex Lee, Daniel Lee, Pete Chen, Robert Glasspool and Michael Soyza to name just a few.
For Soyza, it was a tale of two hands that decided over the fate of the Super High Roller champion. First, he four-bet jammed with eights into the pocket jacks of Yasreel Praveen Doddaiavar and soon after he got it in with ace-nine suited against the pocket queens of Tianyuan Tang. Two nines appeared on the flop, but a queen accompanied them as well to leave the Malaysian with just one out. Quads indeed came on the turn, but it was the case queen instead to leave Soyza drawing dead.
Randy Lew was left very short two spots off the money bubble and hand-for-hand was enabled with two players to go empty-handed. Lew doubled and one hand later, three players were all in and at risk. Kazuhiko Yotsushika ran a gutsy bluff with seven-deuce and Keiji Takahashi called with queen-ten for kings and tens to get back into contention. At the same time, Dong Chen lost a flip with deuces against ace-queen and Huijie Zhou got it in with eight-seven suited against the queen-eight suited of Yan Li to end up second-best to a king-high straight.
In a matter of minutes, the final three tables were set once the bubble had burst with Lew among the casualties. Wai Kiat Lee lost a flip with king-queen against the pocket fives of Daniel Smiljkovic and Jun Obara ran out of chips in a three-way all in at the same table just minutes later. Kenny Shih also missed out on the final two tables when his ace-king found no help in a flip against pocket sevens.
On the way to the final table, Yan Li dominated at the top of the counts. Wayne Heung had to settle for 15th place and the wild roller coaster ride of Kazuhiko Yotsushika ended in 13th place. Yilu Yuan, who bubbled the APPT Korea Main Event and doubled on the High Roller bubble, then lost a big pot with flopped two pair, as eventual runner-up Jian Yang jammed with nine-six suited for middle pair and a flush draw to immediately turn a flush. Yang finished the job with ace-queen versus eights and also claimed the stack of Chuanshu Chen with aces versus jacks.
Yang was also responsible for the first elimination on the final table as Yunye Lu jammed with eights into his kings. Shinryo Nonin lost most of his chips to Yasreel Praveen Doddaiavar and busted the very next hand before Doddaiavar and Wayne Zhang became the next two casualties. Down to the last five, Yongwei Mo (ace-eight) and Calvin Lee (ace-queen) moved all in with their short stacks and Yang held aces in the small blind to score a double knockout and jump above half of the chips in play.
While Yang had done most of the work until then, it was Takahashi that ramped up the aggression and claimed the stack of Yan Li. First he turned two pair and rivered a flush to take more than half of it, shortly after he cracked Li's aces with ten-nine suited.
Heads-up play started with almost 90 big blinds apiece, but it would take less than half an hour to determine a champion without any deal whatsoever. The lead changed a few times and Takahashi pulled into a solid lead. Eventually, Yang three-bet jammed with king-deuce for top pair on the flop only for Takahaski to call with queen-nine suited and the flopped straight to let his rail from Japan erupt in applause.
That brings an end to the PokerNews live reporting from Korea, but the next live events are already around the corner.
Jian Yang had four-bet jammed in the first hand of heads-up and kept his aggressive style, though, it just backfired and left him drawing dead on the turn to end the tournament.
On a flop of in a limped pot, Yang bet 100,000 and Keiji Takahashi raised to 300,000. Yang wasted little time before moving all in and Takahashi stood up from his chair, took off the sunglasses and double-checked the board carefully. He then announced the call and a dozen Japanese on the rail rushed to the table.
Jian Yang:
Keiji Takahashi:
Yang needed running cards for a full house to double or chop with a straight. Instead, it was all over after the turn and that made the river a formality. Yang has been eliminated in 2nd place for ?97,114,000 ($85,460) and Takahashi takes home the trophy and a payday of ?143,890,000 ($126,623) to Japan.
A full recap of today's action is to follow.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Keiji Takahashi |
9,050,000
3,750,000
|
3,750,000 |
|
||
Jian Yang | Busted |
Keiji Takahashi has ramped up the aggression and won a series of pots to pull away into a solid lead. One of the hands saw him bet the river for 250,000 and Jian Yang made the call. Takahashi turned over the for a straight and that won the pot.
Soon after, Takahashi bet the river for 450,000 into a pot of 650,000 and Yang folded.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Keiji Takahashi |
5,300,000
1,100,000
|
1,100,000 |
|
||
Jian Yang |
3,750,000
-1,100,000
|
-1,100,000 |
On the turn, Keiji Takahashi bet 200,000 and Jian Yang called to see the turn. Takahashi now bet 1,000,000 and Yang folded.
Yang three-bet the next hand and forced a fold before losing his profit by calling a raise to 125,000 and folding the flop.
Yang limped in and Takahashi checked. They checked the flop and Takahashi check-called a bet of 200,000 on the turn. On the river, Takahashi led for 400,000 and Yang called to get shown for a bluff. Yang won the pot with and pulled back into his narrow lead.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jian Yang |
4,850,000
-100,000
|
-100,000 |
Keiji Takahashi |
4,200,000
100,000
|
100,000 |
|
Jian Yang inquired whether or not Keiji Takahashi was interested in a deal, but they didn't come to any conclusion. Shortly after the heads-up action kicked off and Takahashi three-bet to 400,000. Yang moved all in and Takahashi folded.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jian Yang |
4,950,000
570,000
|
570,000 |
Keiji Takahashi |
4,100,000
-550,000
|
-550,000 |
|
Keiji Takahashi raised to 120,000 on the button and Yan Li moved all in for around 600,000, which Takahashi called.
Yan Li:
Keiji Takahashi:
The flop came and Takahashi improved his outs. Nothing changed with the turn, but the river indeed gave the Day 1 chip leader trips tens to eliminate Li. With two victories to her name already, Li was on the verge of making history but narrowly missed out on a third title to bow out in third place for ?66,845,000 ($58,824).
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Keiji Takahashi |
4,650,000
1,100,000
|
1,100,000 |
|
||
Jian Yang |
4,380,000
-420,000
|
-420,000 |
Yan Li | Busted |
Level: 25
Blinds: 25,000/50,000
Ante: 50,000
On the tail end of a board , Yan Li paid off a bet of 500,000 by Keiji Takahashi, who tabled for turned two pair and a rivered flush. Li mucked her cards and lost a big portion of her stack.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Keiji Takahashi |
3,550,000
650,000
|
650,000 |
|
||
Yan Li |
650,000
-1,050,000
|
-1,050,000 |