Chih Wei Fan
Taiwan's Chih Wei Fan had a phenomenal performance at the final table of the TWD 250,000 APT Superstar Challenge to win the exclusive APT Black Lion trophy and the top prize of TWD 8,590,525 (~$270,252).
Fan claimed the lion's share of the TWD 20,454,525 (~USD 647,910) prize pool and secured his second career APT High Roller title, as well as his largest live cash, pushing him up into the #15 spot on the Taiwan All-Time Money List with over $900,000 in live winnings.
The local legend outlasted a field of 27 players (23 uniques) comprised of the best of the best in the poker world, coming into the four-handed final table with the shortest stack, roughly approximating 28 big blinds.
However, Fan slowly built his stack with strategic unpredictability and by timing his steals perfectly, leaving his opponents constantly in a quandary wondering what hand he could have at any given moment in time.
Fan had the most Aces at the final table, the value of which he wasn’t able to maximize. And yet at the turning point of the heads-up, it was aces that the Taiwanese player found himself up against, cracking Daniel Neilson's pocket rockets to seize a lead he would not relinquish.
Australia's Neilson, who was hunting his maiden APT title, was forced to settle for second-best and the TWD 5,727,000 (~$180,167) runner-up prize.
APT host Elfin Lin was able to talk to him after his momentous victory and with the aid of a translator, we were able to catch what he said:
“Last year, I lost to Punat’s AA with A5 at this table, and this year I finally lost with 9J to AK in Jeju Island. Now that I’ve achieved this, it feels incredibly significant to me. I believe I’ve grown a lot over these 14 to 15 months, and I’m especially grateful to every opponent who has given me advice or defeated me along the way; they’ve all contributed to my growth.”
And if it wasn’t apparent the joy and happiness he felt, it was clearly reflected by the loud cheering and celebration of his railbirds.
Final Table Action
It was Charles Waymel who was the first casualty of the day, with start-of-day chip leader Neilson claiming first blood after the short-stacked Frenchman jammed over the top of a Steven Song limp and a Neilson raise.
While this pushed Song out, it did not deter the Australian and Waymel found his ten-five suited was trailing to Neilson's ace-queen and stayed that way with both players missing the runout. Neilson extended his lead and Waymel hit the rail in fourth for a TWD 2,455,000 (~$77,232) payday – the largest cash of his tournament career.
Charles Waymel
Stephen Song came into the final table as the second largest stack but was unable to convert this into a win, with Fan relentless in chipping away at his stack.
Eventually, Song found himself as the shortest stack and elected to move all-in from the big blind with jack nine suited over the top of a Fan button min-raise, only to see the Taiwanese player make a lightning-fast call with ace-queen.
Once again both players missed the runout, meaning Fan's ace-high was good for the pot and proved to be Song's swan song, ending the US player's maiden APT title dream. Song collected TWD 3,682,000 (~$115,833) for his bronze podium finish.
This set up the heads-up confrontation between Neilson and Fan, with the Aussie bringing in the chip lead he started the day with after busting compatriot and former Superstar Challenge champion Josh McCully to close out the Day 1 action.
While Neilson picked his spots carefully, it was Fan whom the poker gods favoured, reducing this opponent to just under 11 big blinds after cracking the Aussie's aces by flopping two-pair with the speculative queen-six offsuit.
While Neilson attempted to battle back he was unable to regain the momentum, eventually moving all-in on the river with ten-high as a bluff and running into Fan's slow played trip eights.
Daniel Neilson
The APT Taipei Poker Classic 2024 is still running until October 8 with a lot more exciting and fun tournaments designed for the poker player. Stay tuned for more live reporting, news and updates.