Junyu Huang Wins APT National Cup
The 2026 Asian Poker Tour (APT) Jeju Classic got off to a roaring start with 690 entrants turning out for one of its marquee events — the APT National Cup. After two hard-fought days inside the Les A Casino at Jeju Shinhwa World resort, it was Junyu Huang who held all the chips after defeating Zu You Wang heads-up in an exhilarating heads-up match that saw Huang overcome a more-than 3:1 chip deficit.
For his victory, Huang will take home the Silver Lion Silhouette Trophy along with the KRW 93,844,384 (~$65,855) first-place prize money, which represents the lion's share of the KRW 486,804,384 (~$341,620) prize pool.
Winner's Reaction
"Winning this championship is honestly quite lucky," Huang said shortly after winning his first-ever APT title through the use of a translator. "it’s also a recognition of all the time I’ve spent learning poker along this journey, so I’m really happy."
Huang, who only started playing poker two years ago, spoke with the wisdom of a veteran — mentioning the importance of taking the game seriously on and off the felt to achieve success.
"I think more importantly is to keep learning, maintain a good mindset, and stay focused and patiently wait for opportunities. I think the challenge is controlling impulsive thoughts or irrational decisions, that’s very important."
Huang also expressed his admiration for the APT.
"APT is one of the largest and most professional tournaments in Asia, with a great organization and venue, so I think APT is the smartest choice within Asia."
Excited to hop back into action, Huang explained he still has a full schedule of him.
"Since it's only Day 2 of the schedule, I'll probably just have a simple meal and continue playing tomorrow!"
Junyu Huang
2026 APT Jeju National Cup Final Table Results
Final Day Action
Just 97 of the original 690 entrants returned for Day 2 in what turned out to be a day of near non-stop action. All the returning players had already secured a min-cash worth KRW 1,340,000 (~$920) and weren't shy about getting their chips into the middle.
Qin Peng set the pace after eliminating Piyatassakorn Nopparut just two minutes after play began and the action hardly let up from there.
Among the those in the field was APT Main Event Champion Rene von Reden of Germany, who claimed the prestigious title in Taiwan back in 2024. Von Reden found himself at risk early on after jamming king-queen into Zhiying Zhou's ace-king, but he caught a miracle on the river to keep his deep run alive. Meanwhile, the field continued to dwindle and was down to just 60 players within first hour of play.
Rene von Reden
It was about this time that Wang began his ascent up to the top of the leaderboard after eliminating several short-stacked players in quick succession. In one such hand, Zhi Hao Wang shoved for a handful of big blinds and Wang woke up with pocket nines in the small blind. The board ran clean for Wang and he found himself sitting with over 3,000,000 in chips in Level 27, which was more nearly four times average chip stack at the time.
Despite all the eliminations, Anan Li rose the occasion after entering the final day as the shortest stack and managing to run it up to a competitive stack. However, Li eventually ran out of steam and busted in 23rd place for KRW 2,720,000 (~$1,870) — not bad for starting the day with a single big blind.
Anan Li
By the second break of the day, just 14 players remained. Von Reden was among those to fall just short of the final two tables after getting in a three-way all in and falling to Yung Fung Lau's king-queen holding ace-jack. During the final two tables, Wang continued to claim eliminations and extend his chip lead before Changliang Sun was knocked out just shy of the final table in 10th place after running ace-jack into Qiang Xu's pocket queens.
Wang remained the man to beat by entering the final table with a commanding chip lead and it looked to be his tournament to win after claiming the first casualty of the final table by eliminating Weihong Liu with pocket tens.
Zu You Wang
Vishal Ojha, who entered the final day as the chip leader, made his presence known by waking up with Big Slick and sending Wei Hong out in eighth place after calling Hong's preflop shove.
Xu momentarily put a damper on Wang's momentum after winning a massive flip against him holding pocket queens against Wang's ace-king suited. Following the clash, Xu took over the lead briefly before Wang came roaring back — first by eliminating the last lady standing, Methavee Taveekitvatee, with a dominated king-jack, and then by catching Broadway against Xu in another large pot.
Methavee Taveekitvatee
Xu picked up some chips at the expense of a short-stacked Yi Fei Chen, who was eliminated in sixth place after losing a flip with pocket deuces against Xu's ace-king. Following him out the door shortly thereafter was Jiaqi He, who fell in fifth place after calling all in preflop with seven-five against Wang's queen-nine and failing to improve.
Ojha then took a stand against Xu by calling all in with ace-jack and winning against Xu's pocket fours for a double up. The victory was short-lived, however, as Xu returned the favor by winning a preflop flip against Ojha with ace-king against Ojha's pocket nines. With Xu holding the covering stack in their second clash, Ojha was eliminated in fourth place.
Three-handed play began slow, with players trading pots and no significant chip swings. That all changed, however, after Xu made an ambitious bluff against Wang that didn't work out. Xu was left short after the hand and he ended up being eliminated in third after shoving queen-ten preflop and getting called by Huang's ace-deuce. The board left Huang with a pair of aces and he added some much-needed chips to his stack, as Huang was still at a 3:1 chip deficit against Wang entering heads-up play.
Qiang Xu
Momentum immediately began to shift in Huang's favor after he got three streets of value against Wang holding pocket tens on a king-high runout.
From that point, Huang didn't take long to take over the chip lead after forcing a fold from Wang in a massive pot. Things kept getting worse for Wang after he attempted to bluff Huang with seven-trey and ended up getting caught by Huang, who had flopped two pair.
Zu You Wang
Huang was drawing live to end the match early after calling a preflop shove from Wang with queen-eight against Wang's king-deuce, but Wang instead doubled after pairing his king.
Unfazed, Huang answered right back in a hand shortly after by rivering a flush and getting paid off by Wang for a hefty bet on the end. Wang was left short again and shoved preflop holding seven-six suited. Huang snap-called with what ended up being the best possible hand against Wang's exact cards — pocket sevens.
The board ran out clean for Huang and just like that, Huang completed a remarkable comeback to capture his first-ever tournament title in the prestigious APT National Cup event.
Junyu Huang
The APT Jeju Classic has only just begun, so stay tuned for continued coverage as more APT champions are soon to be crowned!

Junyu Huang
Zu You Wang
Zu You Wang
Junyu Huang
Junhyu Huang
Qiang Xu
Zu You Wang