Zhendong Li
China's Zhendong Li came out on top against some of the world's best players in the KRW 13,500,000 APT Super High Roller to land a career-best score of KRW 229,452,000 (\~$166,600) and the flagship APT pewter lion trophy.
Li topped the 67-player field (53 unique) after getting the better of Jeffrey Lo in an entertaining heads-up battle that saw the player from Hong Kong bank KRW 187,730,000 (\~$136,300) after the two flattened out the payouts. Amazingly, this is Li's first appearance at an APT series and his first-ever APT tournament — what a way to get started!
The prize pool of KRW 831,872,000 (~USD 603,900) set a new record as the richest-ever APT Super High Roller to take place in South Korea. The event also set a new APT country record for the largest winner's purse awarded for this event — even after a deal was made.
Li spoke with the APT Marketing Manager, Ray Chiu, after his victory.
"I feel great right now, very happy. I can't believe I won!" replied Li when Chiu asked how he was feeling.
Chiu asked Li if this was his first time at an APT event.
"Yes, it's my first time at an APT event and also the first-ever APT tournament that I've played."
Chiu also asked Li what his plan was for the rest of the series.
"I will have to play the full spread; Superstar Challenge, Main Event, and as many as I possibly can."
**Li's responses were translated into English with the aid of an interpreter.
Just nine players returned for Day 2 of the APT Super High Roller all having already locked up a min-cash of at least KRW 24,960,000 (~$18,120).
However, all nine finalists had ambitions to make a lot more than that. Malaysia's Anson Ewe brought the chip lead into the final table after bursting the money bubble and sending China's **Song Xue** to the rail in brutal fashion at the end of Day 1, which gave him a huge stack of 4,220,000 to do battle with.
Lo started the day as the short stack with just ten big blinds but defied the odds with a dazzling display of poker that left him as the eventual runner-up.
There was action from the get-go as in the third hand, during a blind-on-blind encounter, Xixiang Luo and Weiran "Kevin" Pu got all the chips in preflop with the former at risk. Pu's ace-queen came up short against the pocket kings of countrymate Luo, which meant they effectively switched positions on the leaderboard.
Weiran "Kevin" Pu
After just six hands, China's Yuzhu Wang was the first casualty of the final table in a limped pot between the two short-stacked players. After getting to the turn, Wang shoved all in with ace-seven on an ace-high board but needed a lot of help against the ace-ten of Lo. No help arrived for Wang which meant he was eliminated in ninth and picked up KRW 24,960,000 (~$18,120).
Lo then won a crucial flip with ace-queen against the pocket tens of Chongxian Yang to boost his stack over the one-million chip mark for the first time. Another double-up followed shortly after for Lo when he laid the perfect trap which **Chih Wei Fan** fell right into. After Lo just called Fan's preflop three-bet, the Taiwanese player shoved all in on the turn with queen-jack and was drawing dead against the pocket aces of Lo, who now had forty big blinds to play with.
Thanisorn Saelor then made a sixty-big-blind three-bet shove with ace-five suited and was put at risk by the pocket queens of Luo. The Thai player did pair his ace but Luo flopped a set which gave him the chip lead and left Saelor with crumbs. It was Luo who then delivered the knockout blow to the Thai player, his ace-king comfortably holding against the king-queen of the Saelor after an ace-high flop. Thailand's Saelor was looking to be the first person to win two of the new-era APT lion trophies, after he won the APT High Roller in Incheon last year, but will have to put those plans on hold - at least for now - as he exited in eighth for KRW 31,610,000 (~$22,950).
Thanisorn Saelor
Yang never recovered after losing that earlier flip and was forced all in from the big blind with eight-deuce after Li had opened with ace-king. Neither player improved on the runout which meant Yang exited in seventh for a payday of KRW 40,760,000 (~$29,590).
Pu followed his compatriot to the sidelines just four hands later after shoving king-deuce from the small blind and running into the king-queen of Lo in the big blind. A great run for the bracelet winner who locks up his first-ever APT cash by finishing sixth for 51,580,000 (~$37,440).
Fan's stack then took a huge hit at the hands of Lo after the Taiwanese player three-bet shoved around thirty-six big blinds effective with jack-nine. Lo made the call with ace-king and flopped Broadway to scoop the pot and take the chip lead, which left Fan as the short stack. The very next hand, Fan would hit the rail, shoving his remaining chips from the small blind with ace-nine and getting a call from Li's jack-deuce. It looked to be a routine double-up for Fan but a jack on the river ended his run in fifth for KRW 66,550,000 (~$48,300).
Chih Wei Fan
Luo would be the next to fall after he tangled with Li on hand sixty-five of the final table. Both players had rivered trip kings and Li had shoved holding king-queen which put Luo to the test for his entire stack. Despite seemingly wanting to give it up, Luo couldn't click the fold button and called off with king-deuce which left him out in fourth with a score of KRW 85,680,000 (~$62,200).
Ewe had laddered up the payouts while maintaining a solid table image but lost a flip with ace-queen against the pocket jacks of Li which ended the Malaysian player's run in third and saw him bank KRW 113,550,000 (~$82,430) for his efforts.
While the remaining two players were preparing for heads-up play, they decided to cut a deal which meant they were guaranteed KRW 187,730,000 (\$136,300) each and left KRW 41,722,000 (\$30,300) on the table to play for.
Jeffrey Lo
Li seemed to get the better of Lo in the early stages of heads-up with his speedy pace and occasional unorthodox style of play working to the Chinese player's advantage.
In the final hand of the night, Lo check-raised the flop with four-five, bet the turn, and shoved the river as a bluff after missing a gutshot draw. A split second later it was all over as Li snap-called with nine-ten after turning a pair of nines which ended Lo's run. A fantastic effort from the player from Hong Kong who will take home KRW 187,730,000 (\~$136,300) for his troubles.
Congratulations to Li on an excellent performance in his first-ever APT tournament. What a way do it!