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Archive for the ‘apptmacauseason2’ Category


APPT Macau: Everything’s zen for Greenstein

Monday, September 8th, 2008

It’s a quiet Monday afternoon in the Grand Waldo Casino, with the spotlight firmly on the four tables in the heart of the tournament floor for the opening level of the PokerStars.net APPT High Roller. It’s been a frenetic opening with the short stacks quickly getting their chips in looking for an early double up.

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A pair of Team PS Pros, Greenstein and Hachem, at table 22.

The strategy worked for Team PokerStars Pro Barry Greenstein (still in his tai chi uniform from this morning’s workout – he looks more serene than normal), who built his stack to 48,000 with A-Q against Tyler Cornell’s pocket nines on a board of A-J-10-8-6

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Matt Kay is one of the first to double up on day 2.

Top online player Matt ch0ppy Kay, who also hails from Mike McDonald’s hometown of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, was another early mover when he tripled-up with pocket aces against the pocket jacks held by both David Steicke and Nam Le.

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Eric: "I just worked you out". David: "Write it down and let's see if you're right".

Steicke has certainly been the mark for the players at table 14 – Eric Assadourian just tested the chip leader’s resolve with a stone cold bluff while Quinn Do put a further dent in his stack by doubling through with jacks against Steicke’s K 5 on a board of 10 8 2 A A (the money going in after the flop).

Two players have been eliminated – Pakinai Lisawad was sent to the rail when Wei Will Ma showed a higher set (10s against threes) on a board of 4h-3d-10d-5d while Andrew Pantling made a runner-runner flush with Qs-10s against Steve Sung’s Ah-Kd on a board of 3h-Jd-4s-9s-8s to end Sung’s tournament.

The field has just been redrawn after PokerStars Sponsored Terrence Chan was sent to the rail when he pushed in with pocket eights against the pocket kings of Yury Kerzhapkin on a flop of Jh-2d-4d, with the Russian improving to a set on the river.

The approximate chip count after the first hour has David Steicke still in the lead on 142,000 from Mike McDonald (95,400), Eric Assadourian (93,400), Wei Will Ma (80,000) and Saehoon Lee (74,100).


APPT Macau: David then daylight; Steicke leads into day two

Sunday, September 7th, 2008
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"If I'm lucky that angel will fall on him": Barry Greenstein experienced the joy of David Saab's incessant chatter.

There may not have been an abundance of big-name pros at the final table of the APPT Macau main event but that shouldn’t be a problem when the final nine players are decided for the PokerStars.net APPT Macau High Roller tomorrow.

A total of 61 players paid the HKD $150,000 buy-in (approximately USD $19,200) but after six 75-minute levels, the field had been reduced to 30.

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Mike timex McDonald impressed on day one of the APPT High Roller.

After the dour nature of the final table, the big characters were back in force and light-hearted banter was the order of the day. And there are some familiar names at the pointy end of the chip count after day one, including Mike timex McDonald (winner of the PokerStars EPT Dortmund earlier this year) on 100,000, Danny Wong (80,000), last year’s APPT Macau main event runner-up and PokerStars Sponsored player Ivan Tan (55,000).

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Xuan Nguyen underlined his status as a player to be respected.

But not for the first time on the APPT, the story of the day has been the run of David Steicke, who took out several well-known pros including Team PokerStars Pro Lee “Final Table” Nelson, to snare the chip lead on 160,000.

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David Steicke: Either the pros can't work him out, or he's just better.

Steicke finished third in this event last year, and is determined to improve on that result, especially after finishing 10th in the APPT Macau main event that finished earlier today.

As Van Marcus said to Steicke just before play ended for the day, “You don’t run like God; God runs like you!”

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Joe Hachem leads the Team PokerStars Pro charge into day two.

Those still in contention include Team PokerStars Pros Joe Hachem and Barry Greenstein, PokerStars Sponsored players Marcus, Eric Assadourian (last year’s winner of this event and a big improver to 90,000 late in the day) and Terrence Chan. Other big names set to return tomorrow are dual WSOP main event winner Johnny Chan, Nam Le, Andrew Scott, Quinn Do and two players who featured at yesterday’s APPT Macau main event final table: Charles Chua and Javed Abrahams.

The list of casualties features Team PokerStars Pros Bertrand ‘ElkY’ Grospellier, Isabelle Mercier and Hevad Khan, PokerStars Sponsored players Emad Tahtouh, Dan Schreiber and Celina Lin, David Chiu, J.C. Tran, Shaun Deeb, Liz Lieu, Harry Demetriou, John Juanda, Kofi Farkye, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, John Phan and Tony bond18 Dunst.


Watch APPT Macau 08: Day One High Roller Event on PokerStars.tv

Play will recommence tomorrow at 2pm, and will continue until the final nine has been decided. The winner will take home HKD $3.7 million; second HKD $2.1 million; third HKD $1.2 million; fourth HKD $900,000; fifth HKD $700,000; sixth HKD $500,000; seventh HKD $400,000; eighth HKD $300,000 and ninth HKD $200,000.


Watch APPT Macau 08: David Chiu Interview on PokerStars.tv


APPT Macau: No lazy Sunday for High Roller players

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

The day-trippers are starting to make their way home after a big day on the tables here at the Grand Waldo Hotel and Casino, leaving the clatter of poker chips and the odd scream of ecstasy or agony from the craps’ pit or nearby baccarat tables as the backdrop for the evening session of the APPT High Roller event at the Grand Waldo Casino.

Danny Wong and J.C. Tran have been the big movers in the first 30 minutes of level four as we tick past the halfway point of the first day.

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J.C. Tran chips up and breaks into the top five.

Tran’s chips came courtesy of Team PokerStars Pro Isabelle “No Mercy” Mercier, who committed her chips with a diamond draw (K-Q on a flop of Jd-4c-5d) against Tran’s pocket kings. The board ran out 2s Ac, leaving Isabelle with plenty of time to prepare for the next PokerStars WCOOP event.

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Isabelle Mercier's high hopes for the High Roller have been dashed.

Tran, who won the 2006 WCOOP main event and celebrated his first WSOP bracelet in 2008 when he took out a $1500 No Limit Hold’em event, is now up to 55,000 in chips.

Wong stacked thanks to Hevad “RaiNKhaN” Khan after the 2007 WSOP main event sixth-place finisher bet 4000 on a flop of 10c-Ad-9s, with Wong making the call.

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Straight to the rail: Hevad Khan.

Khan fired another bullet on the turn of Ah, with Wong again going along for the ride. Khan’s last 6500 went in on the river (8h), with Wong calling and showing Ac-8d for a rivered full house; the same card gave Khan a straight. Andrew Scott remains the chip leader with just over 60,000.


APPT Macau: Team PokerStars Pros flex their muscle

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

The APPT Macau main event was a whitewash for the Team PokerStars Pros, but the empire has struck back in the early stages on the first day of the APPT High Roller event.

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The Joker outfit has been consigned to the back of ElkY's closet.

Isabelle Mercier has just doubled through Chong Wing Cheong with a set of queens to take her stack above 30,000, while the other Team Poker Stars Pros Joe Hachem (29,000), Bertrand ‘ElkY’ Grospellier (25,000), Barry Greenstein (17,000), Lee Nelson (16,800) and Hevad Khan (12,000) have all successfully negotiated their way through the first three levels.

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Ivan Tan is holding his own on a table that includes Johnny Chan, ElkY, Dan Schreiber and Terrence Chan.

Meanwhile PokerStars Sponsored players Eric Assadourian (50,000), Emad Tahtouh (39,000), Ivan Tan (31,000), Dan Schreiber (22,000), Terrence Chan (20,000) and Van Marcus (15,300) are all still in the running.

With blinds about to increase to level four (150/300 with an ante of 25), 48 of the 61 players who started the day remain. Those KOed include Kofi Farkye, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, John Phan, Tony Dunst and PokerStars Sponsored player Celina Lin.

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Liz Lieu is hoping to go deeper in this year's High Roller event.

With Lin’s elimination, Mercier and Liz Lieu remain the only female players in the field. Lieu earned the honour of being the only player to cash in both events at the APPT Macau last year. She is also one of five players who cashed in last year’s High Roller event to return this year, along with Assadourian, David Steicke, John Juanda and Tahtouh.


APPT Macau: Great Scott, Andrew’s in the lead

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

Andrew Scott is a good friend of David Steicke. Like David, Andrew has only recently started playing tournament poker and has been a great supporter of the APPT (in fact, he’s been one of a handful of players to enter every APPT event played so far).

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A steelier Andrew Scott tops the chip count early on day one.

Scott hasn’t experienced the success of Steicke but has worked hard to improve his game in pursuit of that breakthrough result. But Andrew’s never-ending smile has started to fade over the past week as bad beat after bad beat have dented his resolve during this sojourn to Macau.

Not normally one to let his feelings out at the table, Scott has twice leapt from his seat and declared to the entire Grand Waldo Casino that he’s “finally won a race”.

His victim, on both occasions, was Russian Yevgeniy Timoshenko. On the first hand between the duo, Scott raised pre-flop to 800, Timoshenko made to 2600, Scott moved all-in for 14,000 and Timoshenko called. And it was a race – Scott’s Ah-Ks against Timoshenko’s queens. The board duly delivered Scott what he wanted to see: Ac-2d-6h-5d-9s.

On the same orbit, the money again went in pre-flop (only after time had been called on both Scott and Timoshenko) – this time it was Scott who held pocket queens and Timoshenko Ac-Kc. The board was jack-high – 7d-8s-Jh-7c-4s – sending Timoshenko to the rail and Scott into the tournament lead with 60,000.

Meanwhile, the defending champion and PokerStars Sponsored player Eric Assadourian has claimed a big scalp with the elimination of John “The Razor” Phan. On a flop of 4c-9s-8d, Phan bet 2500 and Assadourian called.

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Assadourian blunts the challenge of John "The Razor" Phan.

The turn was the 5h, with Phan taking the bait lured by Assadourian to push all-in with pocket 10s, only to find the Sydneysider holding pocket nines for top set. Assadourian is now up to more than 50,000.


APPT Macau: Putting in the hard yards

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

The life of a tournament pro on the road isn’t all wine and roses. Team PokerStars Pro Isabelle Mercier was the last player to arrive for today’s APPT High Roller event, having already run deep (37th in a field of 734) in this morning’s PokerStars WCOOP $215 2-7 Triple Draw event.

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Isabelle Mercier: is it 4.15am or 4.15pm?

Hiding behind her sunglasses, “No Mercy” joked that she almost had to bring her laptop to the poker table to fulfil her WCOOP commitments. Anything for the event sponsor!

While Isabelle shakes off her exhaustion, David Saab is full of beans, much to the amusement of Team PokerStars Pro Barry Greenstein.

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"I came all the way to Macau for this?" Barry Greenstein, meet David Saab.

Not the most demonstrative player at the poker table, Saab has been getting a few wry grins from Barry, especially after he announce to the entire tournament floor that he was going to attempt to steal the blind of the “one and only Barry Greenstein”. In respect of Saab’s dramatic declaration, Barry duly mucked from the big blind.

Play is now into level 2 and some bigger pots are starting to emerge. On table five, a four-way pot has just been played out featuring Julian Powell, Joe Hachem, David Chiu and Tom Hall.

On a flop of 2d-3s-7h, Powell bet 2200, Hachem made it 4500 and the other two players folded. Powell checked to Hachem on the turn (7s), who bet 6000. Powell raised to 12,000, enough to put Hachem all-in, and the 2005 WSOP champ made the call, tabling pocket queens.

Powell grimaced as he showed pocket nines, which stayed in arrears with the 8c landing on the river. The Team PokerStars pro is up to 33,750, with Powell, also from Hachem’s hometown of Melbourne, Australia, is down to just over 5000.

The arrival of Charles Chua, who finished runner-up in the APPT Macau main event that wrapped-up just over 12 hours ago, has ensured that the final entry list for the APPT High Roller is 61 players.


APPT Macau: Lin can only grin

Sunday, September 7th, 2008
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Celina Lin bows out of the APPT High Roller event.

PokerStars Sponsored Celina Lin has barely had time to catch her breath since arriving in Macau. Media calls, interviews, PR events – she’s even managed to squeeze in some time to play some poker.

However, her time at the table today was all too short as the Chinese-born Australian became the first player eliminated from the APPT High Roller event. With blinds at 50/100, APT Macau champion Yevgeniy Timoshenko raised to 300 from the button before Lin popped it to 1200. The Russian called and they saw a flop of 9h-4c-7c.

Then everything went haywire. Lin made it 1400, Timoshenko responded with a bet of 4500, Lin moved all-in and Timoshenko called. Lin showed pocket aces but was already trailing Timoshenko’s two-pair (9d-7d), and things only got worse when the Russian improved to a full house on the turn (9c), with the river a brick (3s).

After falling one spot short of the final table in the APPT Macau main event, David Steicke has picked up where he left off two days with a gut-wrenching call to take down a massive pot.

On a board of Kd-5c-6c-2d, Steicke bet 3500 into a pot of 14,000 before his opponent moved all-in. Showing the nerves of steel that have made him one of the closely watched players on the APPT, Steicke made the call and showed pocket sevens, and took down the pot when he made a set on the river against his opponent’s Ad-Jc, which missed the board completely. Team PokerStars Pro Barry Greenstein finished off the unfortunate victim two hands later.

It’s amazing to think that Steicke has been playing poker seriously for less than 12 months (last year’s APPT Seoul main event represented his tournament debut). Since then, he’s chalked up one APPT, one Aussie Millions and one WSOP final table (he finished third in this event last year). Not bad for a guy that doesn’t get near the respect at the table he deserves.


APPT Macau: High Rollers walk the red carpet

Sunday, September 7th, 2008
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We're back for the start of the APPT High Roller event.

The hangovers have barely kicked in for Eddie Sabat and his friends after a few celebratory drinks to toast his victory in the PokerStars.net Asia Pacific Poker Tour Macau main event, which wrapped up in the not-so-early hours of morning.

We’ve loaded up on coffee (and some MSG-soaked Chinese barbecued pork) and have returned to the main tournament floor of the Grand Waldo Casino for the start of the PokerStars.net APPT High Roller event.


Watch APPT Macau 008: APPT Macau High Roller Event on PokerStars.tv

The entries have come thick and fast in the past hour, with a who’s who of tournament poker milling around the rail ahead of the order to “shuffle up and deal” from last year’s APPT High Roller champion, PokerStars Sponsored player Eric Assadourian from Australia.

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Eric Assadourian won USD$368,640 as last year's APPT High Roller champ.

Barely a player has taken their seat that wouldn’t qualify for ‘notable’ status, starting with Team PokerStars Pros Joe Hachem, Lee “Final Table” Nelson, Barry Greenstein, Hevad Khan, Bertrand “ElkY Grospellier, Isabelle Mercier, PokerStars Sponsored players Emad Tahtouh, Van Marcus, Terrence Chan, Assadourian, Ivan Tan and Celina Lin headlining the field.

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Joe Hachem leads the Team PokerStars Pros into battle today.

We’ve also spotted Johnny Chan, John Phan, Harry Demetriou, Liz Lieu, Tony bond18 Dunst, Mike timex McDonald, J.C. Tran, Nam Le, Quinn Do, Dan Schreiber, David Chiu, John Juanda, Shaun Deeb, Julian Powell, Kofi Farkye, Steve Sung and Tyler Cornell.

With a guaranteed prize pool of HKD $10,000,000, the event is currently showing an overlay but players continue to file into the casino seeking out registration information.

This HKD $150,000 buy-in (approximately USD $19,200) three-day event features a start bank of 20,000 in chips with 75-minute levels, so the quality field will have plenty of time to showcase their skills. For the final table, the clock will be wound back to the level that allows the average chips to approximate 40 times the big blind.

We’ll be playing six levels or until the field is reduced to 16 players, with the structure:

Level 1: 50/100
Level 2: 100/200
Level 3: 100/200 (ante 25)
Level 4: 150/300 (ante 25)
Level 5: 200/400 (ante 50)
Level 6: 300/600 (ante 75)


APPT Macau: Typhoon Eddie storms to victory

Saturday, September 6th, 2008
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APPT Macau main event champion Eddie Sabat.

Macau is considered the hottest gaming destination on the planet, and with good reason. Since the opening of the Sands in 2002, the big Vegas operators have been clawing over each other to grab a slice of this exclusive but lucrative pie.

The pressure to keep up is immense. New Vegas-style hotels and casinos are popping up at an astounding rate as the eyes of the gaming world turn to the east for the first time since gambling was legalised in the former Portuguese colony more than 150 years ago.

So it was only natural that poker, the game that has taken the world by storm, should eventually sweep into the Special Administrative Region of Macau like a typhoon from the South China Sea.

Less than 12 months ago, the Grand Waldo Hotel and Casino in Macau (the first one-stop hotel and entertainment resort to open here) hosted the first No Limit Hold’em tournament ever played in the People’s Republic of China. The champion was a player with heritage that, like Macau, bridged East and West – Vietnamese-born Dinh Le, who now resides in the UK.

The APPT returned to Macau in 2008 and set a standard for poker comparable to the image and success of Macau as the world’s premier gaming market.

Preceding the 2008 APPT Macau main event was the opening of PokerStars Macau, the first live poker room to open in a Macanese casino. Then over the past six days, the APPT rewrote every record in Asian tournament poker history with the biggest field (538 entrants) and biggest prize pool (HKD $12,643,000 or USD $1,620,897) ever offered on the continent.

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Players came from the across the world to experience Macau and the APPT – from world champions like Johnny Chan to Team PokerStars Pros Joe Hachem, Lee Nelson, Isabelle Mercier, Chad Brown, Bertrand ‘ElkY’ Grospellier and Vanessa Rousso to many of the world’s most accomplished pros and scores of online qualifiers – all representing a total of 73 different nations.

Importantly, more than 15 per cent of the field was made of players from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau, representing the future of the game in this fledgling poker market.


Watch APPT Macau 08: Final Day Overview on PokerStars.tv

The eventual winner bore an eerie resemblance to the player who took out the first event of the tour in 2007. Like APPT Manila champion Brett Parise, Eddie Sabat is a young college graduate from the USA. But unlike Parise, Sabat brought some solid experience to Macau despite his relative youth.

The youngest player at the final table, the PokerStars qualifier had compiled some impressive results over the previous 12 months, including third in the WSOP Circuit Series event at Harrah’s Rincon in San Diego, worth $70,680, back in February.

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He also cashed in the PokerStars.net LAPT event in Brazil last month, and finished in the money twice at the 2008 WSOP. The 22-year-old recently completed his accountancy studies at USC but his poker education continues in the card clubs of LA.

Sabat’s road to victory took more twists and turns than the Great Wall of China: “It was such an up and down day for me. I bled chips early and got aggressive when I need to. I suppose it was meant to be in the end. It’s such an unreal feeling, and it was great to share it with my friends, who were great supporters all day,” Sabat said.


Watch APPT Macau 08: Edward Sabat - Winner on PokerStars.tv

After three day one flights that featured a who’s who of poker, the field of 538 was slashed to 208 for day two with Germany’s Andre Wagner (109,700) leading the field from PokerStars qualifier Mark Walsh (95,000) and Australian (now living in Hong Kong) David Steicke (87,700).

Day two was a remarkable day of poker, with the rate of eliminations not letting up all day with just 39 plays still standing amid the ruins. The man on top of the pile was 22-year-old Eddie Sabat, a PokerStars qualifier from California with 379,5000. He led Charles Chua, a Malaysian-based Aussie (369,500) and another PokerStars qualifier, Canadian Keith Wintermans (358,000).

The pace continued unabated on day three with the 39 players whittled down to the final nine in less than six levels.

The final table line-up was a fitting tribute to the APPT Macau main event and the development of tournament poker in Asia, featuring a Macau resident (Will Cheong), a Beijing local (Tian Chen), a Singaporean (Diwei “Bryan” Huang) and a Korean (So Myung Sim), plus Chua, Sabat, a pair of Scandinavians (Mikael Rosen and Jeppe Drivsholm) plus Englishman Javed Abrahams.

Huang and Sabat held the only stacks of more than one million – Sabat’s chips coming mainly thanks to a massive pot late on day three when his pocket aces took out two opponents.

After two days of chaos, the final table provided a dramatic contrast with players carefully picking their mark until the short stacks began to tumble.

The chip lead was swapped among Sabat, Chua, Huang and Drivsholm until Chua (who’d been down to just 245,000 earlier in the day) went on a charge late in the evening to take the lead into the heads-up battle against Sabat.

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Eddie Sabat and Charles Chua go heads-up.

The end came after the pair had swapped the lead on three occasions, with Chua opening for 150,000. Sabat called and the flop came 6c-Qd-6d. He checked, Chua bet 275,000, Sabat check-raised to 550,000, Chua pushed in and Sabat called.

Sabat showed Kd-Jd for a flush draw, while Chua’s Qs-3c gave him two-pair. The turn (Ac) brought more outs, but the 2d on the river sent Sabat into the arms of the poker buddies who’d railed him all day. He collected HKD $3,540,040 (USD $453,851) for the win.

Less than a month after the world’s athletes farewelled China after the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, it’s appropriate that the PokerStars.net APPT Macau main event followed so soon after. So it’s gold to Eddie Sabat (USA), silver to Charles Chua (Malaysia) and bronze to Bryan Huang (Singapore).

But there are more medals to be awarded. The blogging team will be back tomorrow … err, later today actually … for the HKD $150,000 buy-in PokerStars.net APPT High Rollers event. Play starts at 1.30pm local time.

PokerStars.net APPT Macau main event

1 Eddie Sabat (USA) HKD $3,540,040 (USD $453,851.28)
2 Charles Chua (Malaysia) HKD $2,275,740 (USD $291,761.54)
3 Bryan Huang (Singapore) HKD $1,201,080 (USD $153,984.62)
4 Mikael Rosen (Sweden) HKD $847,080 (USD $108,600.00)
5 Jeppe Drivsholm (Denmark) HKD $632,150 (USD $81,044.87)
6 Will Cheong (Macau) HKD $442,500 (USD $56,730.77)
7 Tian Chen (China) HKD $328,720 (USD $42,143.59)
8 Javed Abrahams (UK) HKD $240,220 (USD $30,797.44)
9 So Myung Sim (South Korea) HKD $177,000 (USD $22,692.31)

All photography © Joe Giron/IMPDI


APPT Macau: Main event final table live updates

Saturday, September 6th, 2008


Watch APPT Macau 08: Charles Chua Final Table on PokerStars.tv

2.40am: Charles Chua (Malaysia) - eliminated in second place

The end has come quickly for Charles Chua, although not without that last piece of drama. Three hands after his trip deuces double-up, the "Chuck Truck", as his railbird friends have been calling him, moved all-in with the flop showing 6c-Qd-6d. Eddie Sabat tanked for a couple of minutes, but decided to gamble and showed KdJd for a flush draw with one overcard. Chua held Qs3c for queens-up.

When the turn came Ac, it looked like Chua would be catapulted into an unlikely chip lead, but a 2d was both the wrong colour and shape for Chuck's Truck, which crashed to an immediate halt. His insurance policy can't have been that bad however, because Chua now has a second placed prize of HKD $2,275,740 (USD $291,761.54) with which to repair his vehicle.

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Eddie Sabat, the "The Truck Stop"

2.30am: Since heads-up play began it has been all-action inside the Grand Waldo casino. Charles Chua , who before the dinner break appeared crippled, and drank half a bottle of whiskey to console himself, has since plied a style of "drunken poker" to great effect, with some amazing luck along the way. On a board of 5s-Qh-Tc, Chua attempted a brazen all-in semi-bluff with Jc8h and a gutshot straight draw, but that was called by Eddie Sabat holding AhQc. Top pair held up for Sabat and he doubled-up to 4.5 million chips, while Chua fell back to 1 million.

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Charles Chua, "Sucky Chucky"

Chua soon committed the rest of his chips in a pot with 2d-5h-8s-9h on the board, holding Qh2h, up against Sabat's Jc9s. Although the flush didn't eventuate, a third deuce on the river kept Chua alive in the tournament... and everyone else out of bed a little longer.

2am: Diwei “Bryan” Huang (Singapore) - eliminated in third place

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Bryan Huang, no help on this occasion

A round of ice creams arrived for the bloggers, and Bryan Huang’s game went cold… After holding over 60% of the chips going into 3-handed play, the Singaporean started leaking chips like an old Macanese junk. Eventually it got to the stage where he felt he needed to take a stand. Unfortunately the A4 of hearts he took into an all-in encounter with Eddie Sabat’s AK offsuit combination, received no help on a board of Jx-5x-7x-7x-Tx, eliminating Huang in third place. He wins HKD $1,201,080 (USD $153,984.62) and continues the tradition of fine performances from Singaporean players, following Ivan Tan’s second place in the inaugural APPT Macau event in 2007.

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Bryan Huang and Charles Chua - why can't we be friends and just chop it

1.15am: Everyone just woke up for a moment there to see an anti-climactic all-in confrontation between Charles Chua and Bryan Huang. After a flop of Ax-6x-Kx, all the chips went in and the players revealed A8 offsuit and A9 offsuit respectively. When the turn and river were repeating tens, the pot was chopped and the status quo maintained. Back to sleep people. Meanwhile the players are on a 15 minute break.

1am: It's getting late in the Grand Waldo casino, and the play over the last 30 minutes or so has not been terribly exciting. In fact, some of the spectators are taking this lull in proceedings as an opportunity to get a little shut-eye in their seats. The bloggers are a tad jealous...

12.30am: The tide has again turned at the APPT Macau main event final table. On the first hand since the elimination of Mikael Rosen, Sabat raised to 145,000 pre-flop and Huang made the call. The flop was Js-Qc-Jd, Sabat bet 220,00 and Huang called. Sabat checked the turn (Kc), but Huang kept him honest with a bet of 150,000, which Sabat called.

The river painted the board (Ks), with Sabat thinking long and hard before he bet 500,000. Huang eventually called, but it was a rare lapse of judgment for the Singaporean as Sabat slammed down Kh-Qh for a full house. He’s now almost level in chips with Huang (2.2-2.1 million), while Chua has 900,000.

12.15am: Mikael Rosen (Sweden) – eliminated in fourth position

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Mikael Rosen, staring defeat in the face.

After something of a roller-coaster ride at this final table, we are down to three players. Rosen held a very short stack early on, but a couple of double-ups saw him amongst the chip leaders.

However Bryan Huang cut him down to size somewhat and then in a confrontation of the two short stacks at the table, the Swede’s A-K lost to Charles Chua’s Q9 when it turned a straight, and then on the next hand he went out when his J-T suited couldn’t improve against Chua's K-5 offsuit.

Rosen has won HKD $847,080 (USD $108,600.00), and also takes the “best stare” award at this year’s PokerStars.net APPT Macau main event. The remaining players are: Eddie Sabat, 1,150,000; Bryan Huang, 3,050,000; and Charles Chua, 1,100,000.


Watch APPT Macau 08: Mikael Rosen Final Day on PokerStars.tv

12am: The clock has just ticked past midnight, and there’s still some serious poker being played. Bryan Huang just underlined his resolve to win this event when he won a pre-flop raising war with Mikael Rosen, which ended with more than 500,000 in the pot.

Rosen eventually mucked after trying to stare Huang down, but the Singaporean was only too happy to flash his bluff (7s-6s). Then Chua doubled up when he survived an all-in with Jh-9d against Rosen’s Ac-Kh when the board came 10s-Qs-7c-8c-Ad for a straight, improving his stack to 900,000. Blinds are now up to level 25 (20,000/40,000 with a 5000 ante).

11.45pm: Players have just returned from a 15-minute and all seem to still have a spring in their step despite the final table reaching the latter stages of the evening. The current chip counts read Eddie Sabat (850,000), Mikael Rosen (650,000), Charles Chua (850,000) and Bryan Huang (2.9 million). Sabat has maintained the momentum he gathered before the break, taking down the first three pots since players returned.

11.15pm: Charles Chua, now swigging down Coca Cola and water like it’s going out of fashion, has been the most active player in recent hands, with a pair of all-in bets that have attracted no interest from the other three players.

Otherwise the pots have been relatively small. PokerStars qualifier Eddie Sabat has coughed up some chips to Rosen and Huang, whose second bet of 175,000 at a board of Q-4-5-6 (all clubs) was enough to take it down.

Spectators have been steadily flowing through the room all day – recent arrivals include Yevgeniy Timoshenko and David Saab, while last year’s APPT Macau main event winner Dinh Le is also here, cherishing his final moments as the reigning champion.

10.45pm: With just four players remaining – Sabat, Chua, Rosen and Huang – the blinds are now at level 24 (15,000/30,000 with a 5000). We also have a special guest on the microphone and APPT tournament director Danny McDonagh takes a breather.

It’s Tony bond18 Dunst, who’s no stranger to being at the final table himself. He recently took out the $3000 No Limit Hold’em event at the WPT Bellagio Cup, worth USD $193,720. The top two players in the APPT Macau main event will win more than that, with the winner in line to take home USD $453,851.28.

10.30pm: Jeppe Drivsholm (Denmark) – eliminated in fifth place

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Jeppe Drivsholm - Jeppe-ki-yay!

After being the most active player in the tentative early levels, Jeppe Drivsholm took the chip lead, but then appeared to sit back for a while as the short stacks duked it out in a number of all-in battles. But the antes and blinds wait for no man, so Drivsholm found himself forced into playing hands he may not have considered earlier.

The Dane put it all on the line with the red fours on the button, and was called by Eddie Sabat with Kd-9d. When the board came Qc-Qd-9c-Kc to the turn, Drivsholm needed one of the two black fours to stay alive. The 6s sealed his fate, but he can be somewhat consoled with the HKD $632,150 (USD $81,044.87) he earned for his performance this past week. The remaining stacks are Bryan Huang (Singapore) 2,100,000, Eddie Sabat (USA) 1,850,000, Charles Chua (Malaysia) 700,000 and Mikael Rosen (Sweden) 700,000.

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Bryan Huang celebrates with friends in the audience.

10.30pm: The tide has again turned at the APPT Macau main event final table after Bryan Huang snagged the biggest pot played so far today. The pre-flop action started with a 65,000 raise from Huang, Sabat re-raised to 325,000, Drivsholm made it 1,000,000 and Sabat called. Huang showed pocking kings and Sabat had Ac-Js. Huang connected on the flop of Kh-8h-4s, and with the turn and river coming Qh Ah, the 2.1 million pot was shipped to Huang. NH sir.

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"I can't look", but Chua survives.

10.15pm: The chips that are now lying in an untidy mess in front of Charles Chua have been put to work twice in recent hands. In response to Dvrisholm’s call from early position, Chua shoved in his remaining 245,000 with the Dane making the call, showing Kc-Js.

Chua had pocket sixes, and buried his head in his cap as the board fell 4s-5d-3h-9d-Qd, doubling him up (we probably shouldn’t use the word ‘double’ within earshot of Charlie at the moment). On the next hand, he shoved in the mess of chips but there was no interest. Cocktails to the final table!

10pm: While Chua was drowning his sorrows, but we suspect Eddie Sabat might have been devouring jalapenos during the dinner break as he is on fire in the early stages of level 23. Sabat called Mikael Rosen’s pre-flop raise of 75,000 to see a flop of 3h-Ks-4d, Sabat checked, Rosen bet 110,00 and Sabat called.

The turn came 6h, Sabat checked, Rosen tanked before betting 250,000 and Sabat again called. The river was Qd, which both players checked. Sabat showed pocket sevens, which was good enough to secure a pot worth almost one million in chips.

9.45pm: Everyone has their own way of dealing with the stress of a final table. Charles Chua decided that a bottle of whiskey was in order during the dinner break (can’t be that many calories) to cope with a session in which is stack plummeted from almost 800,000 down to less 400,000.

Chuck doesn’t look to be moving too well on his feet, and when we inquired as to the state of the “Chuck Truck” that’s been rolling over opponents for the past two days he said that it was … not travelling too well (actually, he used another word that rhymes with ‘truck’, but there might be young children reading this blog).

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Will Cheong, a performance to please the Macanese.

9.30: Will Cheong (Macau) – eliminated in sixth place

This Macanese local, a casino employee who has obviously been paying attention to the mechanics of the game, could not get anything going at this final table. This, despite the raucous cheering of some friends from the second level balcony of the Grand Waldo casino. Following a 200,000 pot he was forced to lay down to Eddie Sabat, leaving Cheong with only 159,000, he felt he needed to make a move.

Unfortunately, at the start of Level 23, Eddie Sabat, from the small blind, raised it up enough to put Cheong all-in if he chose to call. He did, making a stand with K9 suited. Unfortunately Sabat was in a dominating position with KQ offsuit. The board ran out Jc-Js-Th-5h-As, bringing an end to Cheong’s impressive performance in this tournament. With a prize of HKD $442,500 (USD $56,730.77), he’ll no doubt be dealt more cards in the future than he deals himself.

9.15pm: Players have just returned from a 75-minute dinner break, with the blinds up to level 23 (12,000/24,000 with a 4000 ante). After four hours of play, Bryan Huang of Singapore remains the chip leader on 1,440,000 with Mikael Rosen the big mover of the day, improving his stack from 361,000 to 1.2 million.

Jeppe Drivsholm is on 1.12 million and the sole PokerStars qualifier still in the field, Eddie Sabat, is on 860,000 after a roller-coaster afternoon. Charles Chua is down to just 380,000 after starting with 617,000 while Macau’s hope Will Cheong is on 280,000.

7.30pm: Mikael Rosen is on one heck of a rush. His latest chip collecting jaunt saw him raise 55,000 pre-flop, which Bryan Huang and Charles Chua called. On a flop of 3s-Kh-Jh, Rosen bet 105,000, which was called by Huang, however Chua popped it up to 300,000. Rosen responded by moving all in, and after Chua asked for a count, open-folded A-K, giving the massive 900,000 pot to the Swede.

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Mikael Rosen, triumphant again

7pm: Mikael Rosen continues his meteoric rise up the rankings here at the PokerStars.net APPT Macau final table. After a few over-the-top raises with Tian Chen, all the chips went into the middle pre-flop, and Rosen pumped his fist as he revealed pocket aces.

Chen timidly rolled over jacks, but despite having Rosen covered, he would need a lot of help to eliminate the Swedish player. To the turn the board showed 8d-9c-6sTc, which gave Chen and up-and-down straight draw, and caused the crowd to gush in anticipation, but the 2s was no help and Rosen doubled-up again.

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Mikael Rosen commiserates with Eddie Sabat.

6.30pm: The downward trend of Eddie Sabat’s stack has continued after Mikael Rosen pushed all-in after Sabat raised to 40,000. Sabat called, showing Kc-Qd ahead of Rosen’s Ks-Jh. But the flop reversed the odds (Jd-6c-5d), and with the board running out 9s 2d, Rosen doubled through to 480,000.

The chip counts after level 21 are Sabat down to just 210,000, Chen (665,000), Cheong (320,000), Drivsholm (1,170,000), Huang (1,430,000) and Chua (960,000). When we return, blinds will be at level 22 (10,000/20,000 with a 3000 ante).

6.15pm: On day 2 of the APPT Macau main event, Charles Chua’s name popped up in the tournament reporting more than any other player. After playing a number of small pots from position in the early going, the Aussie who now resides in Kuala Lumpur has come alive in this level, taking down a nice pot against Bryan Huang. Sabat was the latest player to donate chips to Chua – after he made a pot-sized raise of 160,000 on a flop of 7h-8d-2s, Sabat folded, putting another dent in his stack.


Watch APPT Macau 08: Charles Chua on PokerStars.tv

5.50pm Javed Abrahams (London, UK), eliminated in eighth place

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Javed Abrahams, tight not so right this time

After briefly taking the chip lead on Day 2, Javed Abrahams was conspicuous in his absence from any big pots on Day 3, but it was enough to get him to the final table, although his stack dwindled to the second lowest; 215,000. After an early double up with pocket kings thanks to Bryan Huang, Abrahams went back into his shell, mostly folding until he felt forced to push his remaining 160,000 chips into the middle with KhQd. He was called by Charles “Not Chucky” Chua, with pocket eights. You may remember Chua rocketed into contention with quad eights on Day 2. After the flop came Ah-4d-Jd, Abrahams had some extra outs, but the Js on the turn, and the 4s on the river saw Abrahams saying goodbye to Macau in eighth place. He wins HKD $240,220 (USD $30,797.44) for his trouble.


5.45pm: The Singapore contingent have just lifted the roof off the Grand Waldo Casino after Bryan Huang took down the biggest pot of the tournament so far against Eddie Sabat. In five-way action, the flop showed 8c-As-4h, Chen bet 40,000 with calls coming from Huang and Sabat.

The turn was 2s, Sabat bet just 20,000 before Huang popped it to 120,000. Sabat called, Chen folded and the river was 5c. Sabat’s bet was again small, just 16,000, so Huang counted out 250,000. Sabat had a call he really didn’t look comfortable with, and it proved the case as Huang showed Ah 3d for a flush against Sabat’s pair of aces (Ad Jh). The pot took Huang to more than 1.3 million.

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Eddie Sabat is stamping his authority on the final table.

5.30pm: The alarm has just sounded to indicate that blinds are up to 8000/16,000 (with an ante of 2000). Sabat and Drivsholm remain the most active players, with the Dane regaining the chip lead on the final hand of the previous level.

After taking down three pots in a row, Sabat was attempting to make it four with a pre-flop raise to 40,000. Both played checked the flop of 8s-8d-7d, and Sabat called Drivsholm’s bet of 65,00 when the turn came 4c. The river was the 3c, Sabat bet 60,000 but sailed his chips into the muck the second Drivsholm called.

5pm: Eddie Sabat picked up where he left off before the break with an aggressive move to take down a 200,000 pot from Tian Chen. There was more than 70,000 in the pot before the flop of 6h-2h-Js. Sabat bet 30,000, Chen raised to 60,000, Sabat reraised to 160,000 and while tempted, Chen mucked. The high-paced drama of the past six days has certainly dissipated today – small raises pre-flop are enough to scoop in most pots.

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Jeppe Drivsholm briefly took the chip lead, and has been the big mover so far today.

Eddie Sabat has just put his foot down to say “Jeppe, that’s enough”. The Dane’s aggressive stance helped him ascend the chip count with more than 1.1 million in his stack. In the final hand before the break, Drivsholm altered his earlier strategy with a call, before Eddie Sabat raised it to 45,000. Drivsholm called, and they saw a flop of 10c-3d-6h. Sabat checked, Drivsholm bet 60,000 and Sabat called. The turn was 2c – this time Sabat bet 70,000, with a confused Drivsholm eventually folding.

With players on a 15-minute break, the chip counts read: Eddie Sabat (815,000), Tian Chen (750,000), Will Cheong (350,000), Jeppe Drivsholm (975,000), Mikael Rosen (295,000), Javed Abrahams (375,000), Bryan Huang (1,050,000) and Charles Chua (760,000).

4.15pm: Blinds are now up to level 20 (6000/12,000 with an ante of 2000). The only significant action since the elimination of Korea’s So Myung Sim came when Drivsholm opened for 22,000, but Rosen reraised to 62,000 from the small blind. Abrahams folded his big blind before Drivsholm decided to move all-in. Rosen was put to a decision for his tournament life, and with only about 270,000 behind he decided to let it go, lifting Drivsholm’s stack above 900,000. The Dane and Bryan Huang have established themselves as the aggressors at the final table.

4.00pm So-Myung Shim, (Seoul, South Korea) – eliminated in 9th place

Aggressive early on with the shortest stack, So Myung Shim only had one move … all-in. The first time, nobody was willing to take a chance on doubling him up, so everyone folded. Next time however, in the small blind, everyone folded to Shim, who went all-in for his last 103,000, and was called by Tim Chen in the big blind. Shim showed Jc-6c and Chen revealed pocket twos.

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So-Myung Shim, home to Korea in 9th place

The flop came 4d-3s-9h, which was no help to Shim, the turn Ks, nor the river, 9d, were enough to send the former professional Starcraft player (interestingly introduced to poker by Hevad “RainKhan” Khan) home in ninth place, with a prize of HKD $177,000 (USD $22,692.31).

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Oops: Javed Abrahams survives an all-in after prematurely showing his pocket kings.

3.45pm: Javed Abrahams has survived the first all-in and call of the final table. In a pot worth 330,000, the Londoner pushed in with pocket kings after declaring all-in on Bryan Huang’s initial re-raise, with the call coming from chip leader and final table aggressor, but only after Abrahams had flipped his cards. Huang still called with A-9, and the board ran out 6-J-J-6-Q, giving Abrahams the pot.

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The quietly-spoken Jeppe Drivsholm lets the cards do the talking.

3.30pm: It took 10 hands before a pot was played down to the showdown, with Jeppe Drivsholm’s K-Q good enough to scoop a pot of 100,000 on a board of K-2-10-A-3. After the loose play of the past two days, the final table participants have tightened their play considerably. We might be here for a while after all!

Will Cheong has announced his arrival with a re-raise of 110,000 after Huang had made it 30,000, which was good enough to take down a nice pot. Meanwhile, Chua has just ordered a cup of tea to settle the nerves – another kick in the guts for the image of the hardcore poker player.

3.15pm: After Chua took down the first two pots, the short-stack So Myung Sim pushed all-in on the third hand for 110,000 but there was no interest. Another of the short stacks, Swede Mikael Rosen, has been active early but his pre-flop betting has been enough to win three small pots. It’s been a very cautious opening to the day’s play, with the combatants happy to let the nerves settles before mixing it up.

3pm: APPT hostess Erin McNaught (a former Miss Australia who also has a stint on long-running Australian soap opera Neighbours to her name) has finished recording her pieces, and we’re about to get underway in the APPT Macau main event.

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APPT TV hostess Erin McNaught adds some glamour to the final table.

A quick scan of the audience reveals a who’s who of the regional poker scene, including Star City Poker Manager Debra Rillo, who’ll be overseeing the PokerStars.net APPT Grand Final in Sydney later this year. SKYCITY Auckland’s Executive Manager – Table Games, Ejaaz Dean is also here, taking notes ahead of the APPT event in New Zealand next month.

There’s also a big cheer squad for Tian Chen, the Beijing-based player who journeyed to Macau with a group of friends to play in the main event (three of whom finished in the money).

Team PokerStars Pro Lee Nelson has also taken his seat, along with Grand Waldo Casino General Manager Gary Woollard and PokerStars Sponsored player Ivan Tan, who’ll be keeping a close eye on his countryman Bryan Huang.

Having covered all previous events on the APPT, this final table has by far the biggest buzz and largest audience following the action. And we’re underway!


Watch APPT Macau 08: FInal Table on PokerStars.tv

2.15pm: Welcome to the Grand Waldo Hotel and Casino in Macau for the final table of the PokerStars.net Asia Pacific Poker Tour Macau main event; the opening stop of the schedule for 2008.

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The APPT Macau main event final table participants.

Six days ago, the first of the 538 players who entered the HKD $25,000 buy-in main event took their seats, but just nine players remain. The final table line-up comprises the “league of nations’ we’ve become accustomed to on the APPT.

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Singapore's Bryan Huang tops the chip count heading into the final table.

The chip leader is Diwei “Bryan” Huang from Singapore, who leads narrowly from Eddie Sabat from the US. But the big story, at least locally, has been the performance of Will Cheong, who becomes the first Macanese player to reach the final table of a major poker tournament in his hometown.

We’re still at least 30 minutes away from the first hand, but the final table atmosphere is slowly building as players collect their thoughts before the chase for the big money gets underway. Play will commence with 20 minutes remaining in level 19 (blinds at 5000/10,000 with a 1000 ante).

Final table participants

Seat 1: Eddie Sabat, Lancaster, CA, USA (1,001,000 in chips)
Seat 2: So Myung Sim, Seoul, South Korea (118,000 in chips)
Seat 3: Tian Chen, Beijing, China (768,000 in chips)
Seat 4: Kuok Wai Will Cheong, Macau (334,000 in chips)
Seat 5: Jeppe Drivsholm, Aalborg, Denmark (863,000 in chips)
Seat 6: Mikael Rosen, Karlskrona, Sweden (361,000 in chips)
Seat 7: Javed Abrahams, London, UK (215,000 in chips)
Seat 8: Diwei “Bryan” Huang, Singapore (1,046,000 in chips)
Seat 9: Charles Chua, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (617,000 in chips)

Final table payouts

1 HKD $3,540,040 (USD $453,851.28)
2 HKD $2,275,740 (USD $291,761.54)
3 HKD $1,201,080 (USD $153,984.62)
4 HKD $847,080 (USD $108,600.00)
5 HKD $632,150 (USD $81,044.87)
6 HKD $442,500 (USD $56,730.77)
7 HKD $328,720 (USD $42,143.59)
8 HKD $240,220 (USD $30,797.44)
9 HKD $177,000 (USD $22,692.31)

Structure

Level 19: 5000/10,000 (ante 1000)
Level 20: 6000/12,000 (ante 2000)
Level 21: 8000/16,000 (ante 2000)
Level 22: 10,000/20,000 (ante 3000)
Level 23: 12,000/24,000 (ante 4000)
Level 24: 15,000/30,000 (ante 5000)
Level 25: 20,000/40,000 (ante 5000)
Level 26: 25,000/50,000 (ante 5000)
Level 27: 30,000/60,000 (ante 10,000)
Level 28: 40,000/80,000 (ante 10,000)

All photography © Joe Giron/IMPDI