Danny Tang Picks up his first APT trophy of the new era
Natural8 Ambassador Danny Tang got his APT Jeju campaign off to a shining start and picked up his first APT Trophy of the new era after he won the All-Star Showdown for KRW 23,517,000 (~USD 17,135) & also bagged himself an APT Main Event seat.
Ray Chiu caught up with Tang after his victory.
"Good, yeah, my first APT trophy ever since the new era, the rebranding, so yeah happy, happy." replied a jovial Tang when asked how he felt after winning the title.
When Chiu asked about Tang's schedule for APT Jeju and what he plans to play in this series.
"I'll be playing all the big stuff, Super High Roller, Superstar Challenge, Main Event, I have a final table to play on the 1st [May]."
"So hopefully I can take 2 trophies."
After finishing runner-up in the memorable All-Star Showdown at APT Taipei earlier this year, Tang went one better to take home the trophy and claim the bragging rights.
**also wins an APT Main Event seat worth KRW 2,500,000 (~$1,820).
Poker stardom had bestowed itself upon the Landing Casino in Shinhwa Resort on the opening day of APT Jeju with some of the world's best players lining up to take their shot at the All-Star Showdown. Natural8 Ambassadors Tang and Punnat Punsri, APT Taipei Main Event champion Daisuke Ogita, bracelet winners Anson Tsang, Weiran "Kevin" Pu, & Dong Chen were all included in the lineup. Bertrand "Elky" Grospellier needs no introduction and neither does the number one ranked tournament player in the Philippines Marc Rivera.
The ninth and final seat was reserved for a wildcard which would be the winner of an APT social media competition. Taiwan's Hao-Shan Huang was the lucky winner and found himself in deep water in shark-infested waters but was determined to give it his best shot.
Huang didn't make it in time for the start of the event as he was busy running up a stack in Flight A of the Korea National Cup where he bagged the fourth-biggest stack to bring into Day 2. As soon as the bubble burst, he made the 5-meter hop to his new seat without a chance to prepare himself for what quite possibly was the biggest poker opportunity of his life.
Hao-Shan Huang
The action didn't take long to heat up as on the very first hand dealt, Punsri five-bet shoved pocket jacks into the pocket kings of Ogita and was swiftly eliminated after the board brought no help. Punsri is known for breaking records but might not enjoy the fact that he will hold the title for the shortest number of hands played in an APT All-Star Showdown event — which will never be broken.
Hand number ten saw Weiran Pu hit the rail as his pocket nines were no good against the pocket tens of the eventual champion Tang.
Rivera followed Pu to the rail just two hands later as he called the shove of Tsang with ace-five but couldn't beat the pocket sevens of the bracelet winner from Hong Kong.
Marc Rivera
The wildcard Huang never really got anything going and was eliminated in sixth after he shoved all in with ace-four and ran into the pocket nines of Chen. A nine on the flop seemed to seal the deal but Huang picked up a flush draw on the turn. However, it wasn't to be as the river bricked out for the Taiwanese player to end his run.
A three-way all-in situation then brought around the demise of Chen as he committed the majority of his chips preflop with king-jack and received a call from Ogita's king-seven. Tsang then shoved all in holding ace-jack and both Chen & Ogita made the call. A clean runout for Tsang saw him more than double-up which sent Chen to the rail in fifth.
Grospellier's seat was empty just two hands later after he defended his big blind with jack-six of hearts and got the chips in on the turn after having picked up both flush and straight draws. Ogita made the call with pocket aces and a brick river meant the man they call "Elky" was eliminated in fourth.
Daisuke Ogita
Tang then took a huge step towards the title after his pocket aces were on the right side of the ultimate cooler against Ogita's pocket kings. After having just been dealt the rockets, the roles were quickly reversed for the Japanese player and he was out in third.
A player from Hong Kong was guaranteed to lift the APT Baby Lion trophy and it was Tang who held a slight chip lead in the unique all-or-nothing heads-up situation they had found themselves in.
After just nine hands it was all over as the chips went in on a seven-high flop with Tsang holding nine-seven and Tang with queen-seven. Both players had flopped top pair but it was the kicker of Tang that proved crucial as the board ran out clean for Hong Kong's number one ranked tournament player and eliminated three-time bracelet winner Tsang in second.
Congratulations to Tang on picking up his second APT trophy, and his first of the new era, in the All-Star Showdown.