Chun Shing Lau
The penultimate day of the APT Taipei 2026 Main Event has concluded inside Red Space Arena in Taipei, with nine players emerging from a challenging day of poker. From the 46 who returned to their seats this morning, only the finalists remain, each now within striking distance of the TWD 16,640,100 (~USD 533,340) top prize and the coveted APT Gold Lion Trophy.
Leading the charge into the final day is Hong Kong's Chun Shing 'Walter' Lau, who bagged a commanding 33,275,000, more than a third of all chips in play.
Lau returned to his seat this morning in the middle of the pack with just 384,000, a relatively unknown face on the international circuit with limited recorded results. What followed was one of the most dominant individual performances of the tournament, eliminating multiple players throughout the day, including a stunning double knockout in the final hand of the night to set the final table and send the field straight from 11 to nine.
Final Table Chip Counts
Kazuma Ishihara
Japan's Kazuma Ishihara sits in second with 11,450,000, having been one of the most resilient players of Day 4. Ishihara doubled through Pei Shan Hsu earlier in the day before eliminating Netnapit Muksatean in 12th place, improving to a full house on the turn to knock out the last woman standing in the Main Event.
Australia's Joshua McCully bags in third with 8,125,000 and is arguably the tournament's luckiest survivor. McCully needed a two-outer on the river to stay alive against Keisuke Tajiri's pocket aces, spiking a king to make a full house.
He also boated up against Barry Craig and doubled through Mayuko Sawada when he flopped trips with ace-nine against her pocket queens. McCully enters the final day as a five-time APT title winner looking to add the biggest one yet.
Joshua McCully and Ren Lin
Also among the final nine is China's Ren Lin, who enters in ninth with 5,925,000. Lin has been on stellar form at APT events recently, winning back-to-back titles at the APT Jeju Classic and now has a chance to add an APT Main Event title to what has been a historic few months on tour.
Kristof Segers of Belgium, who won an APT title earlier in this very series, also makes the final table with 6,525,000, as does Thailand's Pakinai Lisawad, who entered Day 4 as the second chip leader with 4,750,000 and bags in sixth.
Day 4 Action
The 46 returning players were barely settled before the first hand of significance took place. Before cards were even in the air, the second random draw for an APT Championship 2026 Main Event seat, worth TWD 312,000 (~USD 10,000), got underway, with Table 74 selected.
A hand of Super Hold'em was dealt out, and it was The Netherlands' Joris Michl who won with top two pair to claim the ticket.
Joris Michl
Michl's luck ran out during the second level, however, when he got his chips in with ace-king but couldn't win the flip against his opponent's pocket tens. He exits with TWD 285,500 (~USD 9,150) and a guaranteed seat at the APTC Main Event this November.
Ari Engel was the first elimination of the day, falling into a trap set by Kwang Chung Tan. Engel raised all-in from the big blind with ace-six, only to find Tan had been slow-playing ace-king from the small blind. The board offered no help, and Engel's deep run came to an end.
Ari Engel was the first casualty of the day
As the field thinned towards the final table, a number of familiar faces made their exits. Joseph Cheong, who entered the day as one of the favourites and was hunting for his sixth APT title, departed in 35th place, unable to navigate his way to the business end.
Nguyen Le, Vietnam's number one on the all-time money list, also fell short in 36th. Mayuko Sawada, who had been one of the more active players throughout the tournament, exited in 33rd, while Nopparut Piyatassakorn, who had tangled with Michael Concepcion in a notable pot earlier in the day, departed in 34th.
Among the other notable departures were Tran The Anh (24th), Kwang Chung Tan (23rd), Hao Lin (17th) and Segers' earlier victim Chen Shao Ching, who fell at the hands of the Belgian's ace-ten in the early stages of the day.
Netnapit Muksatean was the last woman standing
Muksatean, the last woman standing, was eliminated in 12th place by Ishihara. She moved her last chips in with ace-four and ran into Ishihara's ace-queen, which flopped two pair and improved to a full house on the turn. Her tablemates stood to applaud her run as she made her exit.
The final hand of the night arrived in dramatic fashion. Haeil Jung raised, Jaejoong Kim three-bet shoved, and chip leader Lau four-bet to put both players at risk. Kim held jacks, Jung held queens, and Lau had ace-king.
The king on the flop all but sealed it; Lau scooped the entire pot, eliminating Kim in 11th and Jung in tenth simultaneously, and taking the field straight from 11 to the final nine.

Top (L-R), Miki Shiraishi, Ching En Chen, Pakinai Lisawad, Chia Lin Huang, Kristof Segers Bottom (L-R), Kazuma Ishihara, Tony Ren Lin, Chun Shing Lau, Joshua McCully
What's Next
The APT Taipei 2026 Main Event final table gets underway tomorrow at 11:15 AM local time at Red Space. The action will be streamed with a 30-minute delay on the APT Official YouTube Channel, with live updates continuing here throughout the day.
Final Table Payouts
With Lau holding more than a third of the chips in play, the others will need to find a way to chip through his commanding stack. Every decision from here carries life-changing consequences, with many of the players in the final table looking at career-defining cashes, with a minimum payout of TWD 1,376,500 (~USD 44,120) guaranteed for all remaining players.

Haeil Jung
Jaejoong Kim
Pakinai Lisawad
Justin Chu
Keisuke Tajiri
Ren Lin
Nishant Kumar