Leo Pang
Hongkonger Leo Pang is the chip leader of the TWD 150,000 APT Taipei High Roller. After a slow start inside the Chinese Majong League, the registrations kept pouring in, ending at a total of 160 entries (114 unique), creating a total prize pool of TWD 21,728,000 (~$690,940). This means the guaranteed prize pool of TWD 11,000,000 was almost doubled! The winner of this event will be taking home TWD 5,053,000 (~$160,685) – the largest APT High Roller top prize of the new era.
Of the 35 players that made it to Day 2, Pang was the only player to bag over 1 million chips, 1,237,000. Pang grinded his way slowly to the chip lead throughout the day. At the end of level 13, he played a double average stack, but the biggest pots went Pang's way in the final three levels of the day. Tomorrow is a big day for Pang who can crush his best live tournament poker score of $9,598 by a mile.
Japan's Yosuke Nakazawa is the number two in stack with 993,000. Nakazawa has $153,056 in live tournament cashes and won one APT side event in 2022. Nakazawa was most of the day below average, but a massive pot against Chi-Jen Chu with ace-king versus ace-jack launched his APT High Roller Day 2 hopes.
The podium was completed by Taiwan regular Chen An Lin, who bagged 935,000. Lin is number seven on Taiwan's all-time money list and holds 2 APT side event titles. Lin moved up the leaderboard early on when he won a big pot with pocket aces versus the pocket tens of Jun Obara.
Chen An Lin
APT Taipei High Roller Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts
Other notables that made it to Day 2 are 5th place finisher at the Zodiac Classic Benjamin Jacobs (574,000), #3 of the Philippines' all-time money list Florencio Campomanes (422,000), UK's Jack Salter (408,000), high roller regular Hon Cheong "Ivan" Lee (400,000), Japan's Jun Obara (396,000), Vietnam's Quang Thai Ha (390,000), Bosnia and Herzegovina's Andrija Robovic (310,000), and former APT Main Event champion Dicky "Tricky Dicky" Tsang (302,000).
APT Taipei High Roller Payouts
Day 2 of the APT Taipei High Roller will continue at 11:15 AM local time inside the Asian Poker Arena. The final table will be live-streamed and can be seen through all social media channels of the Asian Poker Tour.
This live reporting blog was brought to you by Life of Poker.