The APT Incheon Kickoff Event has been won by Hong Ru Zhang. The Chinese player beat a field of 288 entries to take home KRW 29,200,000 (~$22,045) after making a deal heads-up with Japan's Shogo Kiruma. It was Zhang's first-ever tournament at the APT, and he walked away with an all-new APT Lion, a career-best score and only his second ever live tournament cash.
Players from China and Japan dominated the final table, with payouts for the final nine as follows:
* Heads-up deal was made
Day 2 started with 42 players, all of whom were guaranteed a min-cash of KRW 1,030,000 (~$780). Japan's Takahisa Watanabe was our top dog for most of the first levels of the day, but saw his tournament turn to ashes at the last three tables. He would bust out eventually in 16th place.
Other notable players who cashed but did not make the final table are Philippines' all-time money list leader Marc Rivera (23rd), Thailand's APT Taipei Mystery Bounty champion. Kiwanont Sukhum (21st), 16-time APT champion Lester Edoc (18th), and Malaysia's Joshua Tjan (12th), with the latter departing after Shogo Kimura cracked his aces.
In one of the first hands of the final table, we lost Japan's Takashi Taniguchi in 9th place (KRW 3,600,000 (~USD $2,710) after Guang Guo Piao's jack-eight called his all-in with ten-nine. If you think this would be a good start to the final table for Piao, you are wrong. The Chinese player hit the rail in 8th place after losing two big pots in a row. Piao would collect KRW 4,400,000 (~USD $3,320) for his 8th place finish.
Guang Guo Piao
After the elimination of Xuefeng Huang in 7th place for KRW 5,980,000 (~$4,510), it would take a while before we saw the next bust out.
Hong Ru Zhang and Shogo Kimura were the big stacks at the final six, and they kept all the other players under pressure. Jung Hwan Shin was one of our many APT debutant's and he was able to survive several times miraculously. In the end, his run would end in 6th place when his king-six lost against Shogo Kimura's nine-eight suited. Shin earned himself KRW 8,140,000 (~$6,140).
The final table's bad beat would occur at the final 5 when Zhangxin Zhao got his chips in good against Hong Ru Zhang. Zhao showed pocket jacks in a massive pot and dominated Zhang's pocket tens. The rail of Zhao went nuts, and they even celebrated after the river hit the board. A few seconds later, they realized that the jack on the river made Zhang's straight to bust out Zhangxin Zhao in a brutal fashion in 5th place for KRW 10,660,000 (~$8,040).
Zhangxin Zhao
The rollercoaster day of Shen Syu Ho ended in 4th place when his last chips were lost with pocket fives versus Zhang's ace-four. Ho grinded himself to a top stack at the final two tables, but the boards didn't run out in his favor on numerous occasions. His deep run in the first event of this series must have felt bittersweet as he ran into several tough beats along the way, but still was able to cash for KRW 13,530,000 (~$10,210).
The battle at the final three players was unfair for Koichi Saeki as his two opponents had piles of chips at their disposal. When Kimura limped his small blind Saeki went all-in with jack-six in hopes of pushing his countryman off his hand. To the disgust of Saeki he saw Kimura trapped him with pocket nines. This was Saeki's first live tournament cash, and it will be a memorable one as he will walk away with KRW16,720,000 (~$12,620) for his 3rd place finish.
A heads-up deal was made pretty swiftly, as both players had around the same stack size. They decided to chop and play for the trophy and leave KRW 1,360,019 in the middle for the winner. The deal ensured both players were trigger-happy, and after several big pots went Zhang's way, he decided the heads-up battle in his favor when his pocket fours won the race against Kimura's ten-nine.
Join us tomorrow for another live reporting blog from Incheon. We will be following Day 2 of the Mystery Bounty, which will start at 12:15 PM local time.
This live reporting blog is brought to you by Life of Poker.