Jinwoo Kim
The ₫50,000,000 + 5,000,000 APT High Roller - 8 Max has been won by Jinwoo Kim of the United States. Kim outlasted a field of 102 entries on his way to the trophy and a payday of ₫1,263,940,000 ($54,350). Kim beat Ngoc Minh Le of Vietnam heads-up in a grueling battle that stretched across three levels with the American player coming out on top. Kim adds another major title to his name after winning the APT Main Event in Seoul almost five years ago for ₩26,225,000 ($23,719).
Day 2 of the High Roller - 8 Max began with 31 players fighting to make the final table of nine and the line-up couldn't have looked more exciting. The first to fall would be China's Xiaochun Shi in ninth when he was involved in a three-way all-in pot with countrymate Yuhang Chen and Portugal's Jose Catela. Shi held ace-ten after re-shoving his stack over Chen's initial all-in, only for Catela to go all in covering them both. Chen would find a triple up in that hand but Shi would come up short to both players and be our first player eliminated.
Catela's stack would dwindle and he would finally shove the remainder of his chips in the middle with pocket nines. Unfortunately for the Portuguese player he ran into Le's pocket queens and was almost drawing dead when the flop came queen high. Catela took victory in a US-based tournament last year for $224,405 so had the ability to handle high-pressure final tables but alas he would be our second casualty of the final table and finish eighth.
Shunsuke Tokoo
Popular Youtuber and vlogger Shunsuke "Shunpoker" Tokoo would be next to fall as he finished seventh for ₫230,040,000 ($9,890). Tokoo would run his ace-ten suited into eventual champion Kim's pocket jacks. The Japanese player couldn't find a way to win the hand, but I'm sure he will be impressed with his run here.
In sixth would be China's Yuhang Chen. The cheerful Chen has played an array of events during the Phu Quoc leg of the APT and his name appeared several times on the payout sheets. Chen would be eliminated when his shoved queen-jack but ran into runner-up Le's ace-jack and could not improve. Chen takes ₫291,870,000 ($12,550) home with him,
At the start of the final table it was Nikolay Ponomarenko who had the bulk of the chips in play bringing through a stack worth around 33% of the total chips in play. Ponomarenko would play the big-stack-bully at the final table but lost a huge hand to Kim when his flopped two pair ran into the turned straight of the American. Ponomarenko would bust when he rivered two pair with queen-ten but that same river card gave Kim broadway and the Russian player was out in fifth.
William Jia
William Jia would fall just shy of the podium places in fourth for a cash of ₫462,540,000 ($19,890). Jia won an interesting hand against Kim when he appeared to call light on the river and Kim mucked his hand without revealing his hole cards. Luck would not be on Jia's side today as his ace-seven would be rivered by the ace-four of Kim when it seemed certain the two players would chop the pot.
Taking third place was Japan's Yamamoto Kazuo ₫571,380,000 ($24,525). Kazuo held with pocket tens against the ace-king of Ponomarenko to help him stay afloat and into the final three. Kazuo would bust when his pocket deuces couldn't win a flip against Kim's queen-jack and the Japanese player took home the bronze medal.
When heads-up play began both players had very similar chip stacks with Kim just edging out Le in the counts with a 60:40 split in Kim's favor.
The two would battle it out for almost 90 minutes across three different blind levels before a winner could be found.
In the final hand Kim was the aggressor across all three streets with the river bet being a shove which was enough to put Le all in. Le had run out of time-extension chips during the final table so only had 30 seconds to act with each decision, and without much thinking time, he elected to call down Kim with a flopped pair. That pair would be no good as Kim had flopped a straight and got maximum value to win himself the APT High Roller - 8 Max title and take home ₫1,263,940,000 ($54,350).