Break Time, Heads Up After the Break
John Juanda and Andy Andrejevic are heads up for the ACOP Super High-Roller Championship. They are on a ten-minute break and will resume play after some they take a few photos.
John Juanda and Andy Andrejevic are heads up for the ACOP Super High-Roller Championship. They are on a ten-minute break and will resume play after some they take a few photos.
Level: 19
Blinds: 120,000/240,000
Ante: 40,000
Alan King Lun Lau is the 2015 Asia Player of the Year. On the final day of the Asia Championship of Poker, Lau celebrated his player of the year honor by proposing to his girlfriend. She said yes and there wasn't much of a sweat, unlike the last week of the APOY race.
Lau was in first place going into the ACOP Main Event. Ka Cheong Wong was only 20 points behind Lau and needed at least a tenth-place finish to take the lead. Won finished in 11th place and all but sealed the deal for Lau.
Congratulations to the newly-engaged Alan King Lun Lau, the 2015 APOY winner.
John Juanda three-bet folded the very first hand of heads up and then was out three hands later.
Andy Andrejevic raised to 500,000 from the button before Juanda three-bet to 1,500,000 from the big blind. Andrejevic shoved and Juanda winced and said, "I only looked at one!" He looked at the other and admitted it was bad but still might call. After a minute he showed the and folded.
Three hands later, Juanda moved all in for just over 3.5million and Andrejevic called.
Juanda:
Andrejevic:
Junada was happy with what he saw but not for long as the board ran to give Andrejevic the pot, the scalp and the title!
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Andy Andrejevic |
25,500,000
5,705,000
|
5,705,000 |
John Juanda | Busted | |
|
It took just over four levels of play to wrap up the final table of 2015 Asia Championship of Poker HK$500,000 Super High Roller, and when the dust had settled, it was Serbian-American player Andy Andrejevic standing victorious. Andrejevic beat John Juanda heads up to win the coveted title and HK$8,725,000 (approx. $1,112,000).
The final six players returned at 2:30 p.m local time and all were already in the money as play finished on Day 2 after the bubble had burst. Two hours later, three players had already hit the rail.
Erik Seidel came in as the shortest stack and was the first out. He moved all in with ace-seven, but Anton Astapau had ace-ten, called, and took him out.
Astapau himself was out 15 minutes later after when he ran into Andrejevic and couldn't survive despite flopping a set.
The last player out before the break was reigning champion Steve O'Dwyer. Despite beginning the day second in chips behind Andrejevic, he lost a big chunk of his stack when he ran kings into Bryn Kenney's aces. The rest went to Andrejevic, with O'Dwyer's king-queen fairing worse than ace-ten after five cards, and the back-to-back run was over.
Andrejevic, Juanda, and Kenney battled hard for more than two hours without an elimination, then two quick hands at the end of the fourth level saw Kenney depart.
Kenney first doubled with ace-eight to Andrejevic's queen-jack and went to head off for the break, but the dealer quickly gathered the cards and riffled with seconds to spare on the level, so there would be one more to play. That one more hand turned out to be Kenney's last, as he sat back down, picked up king-jack, three-bet all in, and busted to Andrejevic's dominating ace-king.
Heads-up play only lasted four hands before Andrejevic sealed the deal. After he had invested just HK$40,000 into a live satellite for this event, Andrejevic's dreams were made true. As it turned out, Andrejevic was ready to leave Macau, but stayed an extra couple days after his friends begged him, entered the satellite, and won a seat. The rest, as we say, is history.
That's wraps up PokerNews' coverage of Season 9 of the APPT. Season 10 of the tour kicks off in January back here in the City of Dreams for the Macau Millions, quickly followed by the spectacular Aussie Millions down in Melbourne. Click here for more details.
Super High Roller
Day 1 Completed