Yohei Kitazato
Yohei Kitazato emerged victorious in the APT High Roller at the 2025 APT Manila Classic, overcoming a tough field of 127 entries (90 unique) to claim the Bronze Lion Trophy and the PHP 5,360,600 (~$92,107) top prize. The Japanese pro navigated a rollercoaster final table, securing a dramatic triple-up with quad kings before closing out Leon Sturm in heads-up play.
Along with the title, Kitazato also locked up a TWD 350,000 (~$10,700) seat for the upcoming APT Championship later this year, which boasts a TWD 165 million (~$5 million) guaranteed prize pool. With this victory under his belt, he now sets his sights on an even bigger stage, hoping to extend his winning run.
The PHP 21,945,600 (~$380,370) prize pool was shared among the top 17 finishers, with players battling through a tense bubble phase before shifting their focus to the final table. Sturm, who came within reach of the title, was forced to settle for runner-up, while Benjamin Jacobs rounded out the podium in third place.
The road to victory was anything but smooth for Kitazato, who entered heads-up play with a commanding lead but quickly saw it evaporate. However, a massive hand where his turned nut flush cracked Sturm’s flopped set sealed the momentum shift, leaving his opponent short-stacked. Moments later, Kitazato put the tournament to rest, ensuring his name would be etched into APT history.
APT High Roller Final Table Results
*Also wins a TWD 350,000 APTC seat
The final day began with 35 hopefuls, all aiming to navigate their way into the money before setting their sights on the final table. Early exits included Zhen Chen (32nd), Victor Dai (30th), Daniel Smiljkovic (27th), and Florencio Campomanes (26th), each falling short of a cash.
As the bubble approached, the tension grew, with Rishi Mehra (21st), Michael Allen (20th), and Thijs Hilberts (19th) coming painfully close to a payday. Emilien Pitavy then found himself at risk, running pocket jacks into Shinya Maeda’s pocket kings. Just when it seemed his tournament was over, a fortunate jack on the turn kept his hopes alive—much to the frustration of Seong Uk Huh, who remained short-stacked.
Huh’s fate was ultimately sealed as his queen-jack couldn’t overcome Pitavy’s ace-jack, officially bursting the bubble and securing the final 17 players a place in the money.
Seung Uk Huh (right) bubbles APT High Roller
Bao Qiang Ho (14th) and Scott Margereson (13th) fell just shy of the final table, as did the last remaining APT Lion Trophy holder, Thanisorn Saelor—the 2023 APT Incheon High Roller champion.
Saelor’s run came to an end in a crucial flip, as his ace-queen went up against Benjamin Jacobs’ pocket tens. A clean board for Jacobs meant no comeback for Saelor—who bowed out in eleventh—while Jacobs surged to the top of the chip counts heading into the final table.
Thanisorn Saelor
When the final table began, the average stack sat just below thirty big blinds. However, per APT policy, major final tables must start with an average of at least thirty big blinds, prompting a rollback to Level 22 to ensure deeper play.
The final table saw its first elimination just four hands in, as Seungmook Jung, who started one off the bottom of the counts, moved all in for around ten big blinds with ace-six. Emilien Pitavy called with ace-ten, and while Jung picked up an open-ended straight draw on the flop and additional chop outs on the turn, he couldn’t find the help he needed. Pitavy’s kicker held, sending Jung to the rail in ninth.
Vlada Stojanovic was the next to fall after shoving from the button with ace-jack, only to be called by Sturm in the big blind with ace-queen. With no help from the board, Stojanovic’s run came to an end in eighth place.
Adalsteinn Karlsson
Adalsteinn Karlsson, fresh off an eighth-place finish in the APT Main Event yesterday, was the next to hit the rail. Entering the final table as the short stack—just as he had in the Main Event—Karlsson once again found a way to climb the payouts, this time laddering up two spots. The Icelandic player's run came to an end when he shoved the river with queen-jack, only to run into Pitavy's full house with pocket queens.
With six players remaining, Sturm and Benjamin Jacobs had begun to distance themselves from the rest, holding nearly two-thirds of the chips in play between them. But just as they seemed poised to tighten their grip, a monstrous three-way all-in reshaped the tournament in an instant.
John Matsuda
Nopparut Piyatassakorn moved all in with ace-seven suited, looking for a much-needed double, only for John Matsuda to shove over the top with pocket jacks. Just as the two were ready to sweat the runout, Pitavy looked down at pocket aces in the big blind and instantly called, putting both opponents at risk. The runout brought no miracles, as Pitavy’s rockets held firm to secure a double knockout, eliminating Piyatassakorn in sixth and Matsuda in fifth. Just like that, the tournament was down to its final four.
Four-handed play stretched on as the remaining players traded chips, each looking for an edge. Eventually, Sturm cranked up the aggression, shoving jack-nine from the small blind into Pitavy in the big blind. Pitavy made the correct call with ace-seven, but the deck put an end to his run—a jack landed on the flop, sealing his fate and sending him to the rail just shy of the podium.
Emilien Pitavy
Kitazato had nursed a short stack all the way to the final three and was looking for a breakthrough. He found a much-needed double-up when he got it in with ace-jack against Jacobs’ king-jack. A king-high flop looked like the end for Kitazato, but the deck had other plans—running clubs gave him a flush, keeping him in contention.
Jacobs, however, struck back shortly after, winning a crucial flip with pocket fours against Kitazato’s ace-ten to reclaim some of those lost chips. But just moments later, the tournament was completely turned on its head with a three-way all-in.
Sturm shoved the button with ten-nine, and Jacobs quickly called from the small blind with ace-eight. Kitazato, waking up with pocket kings in the big blind, snap-called—and the deck delivered quads, tripling him up in at just the right time. Jacobs took the side pot and in an instant, the leaderboard flipped upside down.
Benjamin Jacobs
Despite taking the side pot in that three-way hand, Jacobs had his stack at risk again shortly after with ten-nine, and had to overcome the king-queen of Kitazato. However, a king-high flop was enough to end Jacobs' run in third.
Kitazato entered heads-up play with a five-to-two chip lead, but that advantage vanished almost immediately. On the very first hand of the duel, Sturm found a crucial double-up. Holding queen-eight, he turned trips and confidently called Kitazato’s river shove. Kitazato, who had paired his ace holding ace-queen, was left stunned as the chips slid across the table, resetting the battle to around even stacks.
A huge hand then played out as Sturm's flopped set with pocket threes was taken down by the turned nut flush of Kitazato, who held ace-ten. The chips found themselves in the middle on the river after Kitazato went bet-bet-jam, and Sturm was left on life support with less than three big blinds.
Leon Sturm
Sturm managed to stay alive with back-to-back double-ups—first, his pocket nines held against Kitazato’s jack-five, and shortly after, his king-nine prevailed over seven-six. However, the climb back was simply too steep, and his hopes of a full comeback were ultimately crushed shortly after.
In the final hand of the night, Sturm paired his three on the flop with four-three and got his chips in on the turn against Kitazato’s jack-nine, who had flopped top pair. The river blanked, sealing the victory for Kitazato, while Sturm was forced to settle for second place.
As champions are crowned and fortunes are won, Kitazato's victory serves as a reminder that resilience and well-timed aggression can turn the tide in even the toughest battles. With his APT Championship seat secured, his journey is far from over—his next challenge awaits on an even bigger stage later this year.
Yohei Kitazato claims the APTC seat