Scott Davies raised to 60,000 from the button and Sheng Sun three-bet for 125,000 more. "Too much," the American laughed and mucked his cards immediately while he was shown the .
One hand later, Davies bet the turn for 80,000 out of the big blind and folded to a 200,000-raise by Sun.
Jack Hu raised to 69,000 from the button and was called by Sheng Sun in the big blind, setting up a heads-up flop of . Sun check-called a bet of 85,000 and quickly did so again for 213,000 on the turn. The river completed the board and the start-of-the-day chip leader checked for a third time.
Hu announced a bet of 450,000 and Sun cut through his stack to make the call, sliding forward the chips after about one minute of consideration. Hu instantly mucked and Sun showed him the for tens and nines.
Scott Davies raised to 80,000 from the button and Jack Hu defended his big blind. On the flop both players checked and the turn saw Hu leading for 105,000. Davies made the call before both players again checked the on the river.
Hu announced ten-high and Davies scooped it with the .
During the last break, the blue T-1,000 chip denominations have been removed from play and Sheng Sun got three fresh stacks of orange T-25,000 chips now. He took some profit off Davies right after by calling a raise to 95,000 out of the big blind and leading the flop, the American mucked.
Back from the break, both Jack Hu and Scott Davies were eager to get their stacks in and the American was the first to give it a try. His shove was snap-called by Sheng Sun and that was bad news for Davies. "You got a pair?" Sun just nodded and the World Series of Poker Asia Pacific Main Event champion needed a lot of help.
Sun:
Davies:
The flop bricked and so did the turn. Davies asked for the but it was the instead. So close but yet so far. The American still laughed and heartily shook the hands of his two opponents, leaving the tournament area with a smile on the face. He takes home HK$443,100 and the heads-up seems very one-sided at the start.
The heads-up lasted only a few hands and it was Sheng Sun, who woke up with yet another premium hand. He grabbed some chips and wanted to raise without announcing it. Jack Hu first complained about that to his opponent in Chinese but then happily moved all in to see Sun snap-call:
Sun:
Hu:
The flop made things very clear, even though the turn provided a possible miracle. Low and behold, it was the river that ended the tournament and crowned its champion Sheng Sun. Hu had to settle for second place and received HK$664,700 for his efforts.
Winner pictures and recap for today will be online as soon as possible!
The second and last day of the PokerStars.net Asia Pacific Poker Tour Season 9 HK$50,000 Freezeout at PokerStars LIVE Macau at the City of Dreams saw the final 26 players of an 81-player field return to battle down to a winner.
Only the top 10 spots were paid and the action started fast and furious with 2014 World Series of Poker Asia Pacific Main Event champ Scott Davies, start-of-the-day chip leader Sheng Sun, and Chinese Taipei's Jack Hu being among the most active. Those three players ultimately reached the podium, and it was Sun who emerged victorious to take down the silver trophy and the HK$997,100 (USD$128,598) first-place prize after knocking out both his opponents in quick succession.
Sun had three Hendon Mob entries to his name prior to the win, and all three happened to be third-place finishes. The biggest of them came at the 2012 APT Manila when he took home HK$4,650,000. Obviously he's now got the monkey off his back with a hard earned victory.
Within the first two 60-minute levels, the field was reduced to the last 14 hopefuls and the biggest surprise was surely the elimination of Rajeev Raut. The man from India started Day 2 third in chips, but all of them vanished within the first hour. Meanwhile, Hu and Sun dominated their table and the incredible heater of Davies started after an early hiccup where the American lost with kings to deuces.
Interestingly, Devan Tang missed the entire first hour of Day 2 and showed up late to run up his remaining five big blinds to more than half a million chips before losing a flip to Davies.
The Dane was trying to break into the phalanx of his three dominating opponents, but busted if fourth after one of the most spectacular hands of the tournament where Sun's ten-high scooped the pot versus Mittendorff's six-high. A huge hero-call by the Sun made him the clear chip leader at the end of Level 19, and he took out Davies in third and Hu in second within 15 minutes. It obviously also helped that he picked up pocket queens and kings to do so.
Final Table Results
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (HKD)
1
Sheng Sun
China
$997,100
2
Jack Hu
Chinese Taipei
$664,700
3
Scott Davies
USA
$443,100
4
Kim Wittendorff
Denmark
$369,300
5
Percy Yung
Chinese Taipei
$295,400
6
Thomas Ward
New Zealand
$258,500
7
Meng Dian Peng
China
$221,600
8
Devan Tang
Hong Kong
$184,600
9
Yung Bing Chu
Chinese Taipei
$129,245
10
Alberto Gomez
Spain
$129,245
We had a fun little chat with the champion Sheng Sun, and talk at length about that memorable hand with ten-high:
The APPT festival in Macau continues for another four days, and on Thursday at 14:00 local time the second starting day of the HK$25,000 Main Event gets underway. Of course the PokerNews live reporting team will be back then to keep you up to date on all the action.
*Winner picture by Kenneth Lim Photography courtesy of PokerStars LIVE Macau