2017 PokerStars Festival Korea

Main Event
Day: 1b
Event Info

2017 PokerStars Festival Korea

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
qj
Prize
83,130,000 KRW
Event Info
Buy-in
1,650,000 KRW
Entries
285
Level Info
Level
27
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
10,000

Japanese Players, Led by Yuki Ko, Dominate on Day 1b

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante
Yuki Ko
Yuki Ko

Day 1b of PokerStars Festival Korea Main Event proved to be a fantastic day for the Japanese contingent here at Paradise City Hotel & Resort in Incheon.

When the dust settled at the end of 12 levels of play, five of the top seven chip counts belonged to players from the land of the rising sun. Foremost among them was Yuki Ko, who turned a 30,000 starting stack into 226,300. That's good for the overall lead with two of four starting flights in the books, as it's well clear of the 201,000 posted by Sparrow Cheung on Day 1a.

Ko has been plenty active and successful on the Asian tournament circuit since the start of 2016, tallying north of $250,000 in cashes. He used an unpredictable style to build up his massive stack here in Korea. He had opponents so bamboozled that at one point a player called off on a river shove from Ko with an ace-high board in the middle holding an unimproved pair of fives in the hole. Ko showed down ace-king and took down the pot.

At the end of the night, Ko took down another big one that showed just how good he was running when he managed to make quads with jack-six offsuit defending his big blind. Ko got a check-raise paid off on the turn and then put in an overbet shove on the river that got called to take down a pot of over 120,000.

Ko's countrymen joining him near the top of the leaderboard were Mitsuru Sano (173,900), Shigeho Yoshioka (151,800), Akira Ise (144,500) and Takashi Ogura (140,200).

Other players bagging piles were Daniel Demicki (209,500) and Justin Chan (203,700). Demicki came into the tournament fresh off of a sixth-place finish for ₩16,500,000 (~$14,700).

Overall, Day 1b drew 66 entries to push the two-day total to 120. There's still two more Day 1 flights to go, and both will take place Saturday. The first kicks off at 11 a.m. local time, and coverage will continue then here on PokerNews. Stay tuned to see who else punches a ticket to Day 2.

Tags: Yuki Ko

Quads with the Jack-Six

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante
Yuki Ko
Yuki Ko

A player on the button opened for 4,200 and Yuki Ko defended the big blind. The flop came down {10-Spades}{8-Hearts}{6-Spades} and both players checked. Ko checked the {6-Clubs} turn and saw his opponent bet 5,000. Ko made it 14,000 and got called. The river was a {6-Hearts} and Ko asked to see his opponent's stack. It looked like about 43,000. After a few moments, Ko said he was all in. The player on the button called in fairly short order but Ko tabled {j-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} for quads.

Player Chips Progress
Yuki Ko jp
Yuki Ko
200,000
2,900
2,900

Tags: Yuki Ko

Demicki Sniffs Out the Airball

Level 9 : 500/1,000, 100 ante
Daniel Demicki
Daniel Demicki

Daniel Demicki three-bet to 6,000 from the big blind and got a call from the player in the cutoff. Both checked the {6-Clubs}{3-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds} flop and the turn was a {5-Diamonds}. Demicki bet 9,000 and his opponent immediately shoved all in for 47,600. Demicki thought briefly and then called.

Demicki: {10-Diamonds}{10-Spades}
Cutoff: {a-Clubs}{q-Clubs}

Demicki had just four outs to fade, and the {7-Spades} wasn't one of them. The Polish player just moved over from the High Roller, where he finished sixth, but he already has four starting stacks.

Player Chips Progress
Daniel Demicki pl
Daniel Demicki
126,200

Tags: Daniel Demicki

Sano Takes Three-Way All in

Level 7 : 300/600, 100 ante
Mitsuru Sano
Mitsuru Sano

A player was already all in from the small blind when we got to Mitsuru Sano's table, so there was about 30,000 in the middle. Sano was in middle position and facing another all-in wager from the player on the button, who had about 50,000, enough to cover Sano. Someone called a clock, and about halfway through his remaining time, Sano called.

Sano: {j-Hearts}{j-Spades}
Small blind: {a-Hearts}{9-Hearts}
Button: {8-Hearts}{8-Clubs}

Sano's jacks were best, and they got way better after the {j-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{3-Spades} flop. The {4-Spades} turn ended even the slim chance that he could lose the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Mitsuru Sano jp
Mitsuru Sano
120,000
67,000
67,000

Tags: Mitsuru Sano

Zachowicz Eliminates Kitauchi

Level 5 : 200/400, 50 ante
Damian Zachowicz
Damian Zachowicz

Damian Zachowicz opened for 1,000 in the cutoff, and Yoshihiro Kitauchi shoved all in from the button. It was about 4,000, and Zachowicz snap-called when the blinds folded.

Zachowicz: {a-Diamonds}{a-Clubs}
Kitauchi: {q-Hearts}{j-Hearts}

Kitauchi found a great flop as {q-Spades}{9-Hearts}{6-Hearts} hit the felt, but the {9-Diamonds} limited his outs a bit on the turn. The river was a {4-Diamonds}, and Zachowicz scored the knockout.

Player Chips Progress
Damian Zachowicz pl
Damian Zachowicz
36,000
36,000
36,000
Yoshihiro Kitauchi jp
Yoshihiro Kitauchi
Busted

Tags: Damian ZachowiczYoshihiro Kitauchi

Ko Stacks One After Thin River Call

Level 4 : 150/300, 25 ante
Yuki Ko
Yuki Ko

Yuki Ko moved all in when we got to his table, with {7-Spades}{a-Hearts}{3-Hearts}{3-Diamonds}{q-Diamonds} on the felt. Ko was in the cutoff and there was about 21,000 in the pot. He was all in for about 13,000 effective against a player on the button, who thought things over for about a minute and then dropped in his stack.

Ko turned over {a-Diamonds}{k-Hearts}. His opponent mucked, but per tournament rules, the dealer turned over {5-Hearts}{5-Diamonds} as he walked away.

Player Chips Progress
Yuki Ko jp
Yuki Ko
67,000
26,000
26,000

Tags: Yuki Ko

Welcome to Day 1b of PokerStars Festival Korea Main Event

PokerStars chips
PokerStars chips

One starting flight is down and three flights are still to go in PokerStars Festival Korea Main Event.

What could go down as the biggest poker tournament in Korea's history began Thursday with Day 1a, which brought out a field of 54 runners and wound up with 17 survivors when 12 levels were in the books. Dmitrii Kovalevskii had the biggest stack of the bunch, but notables like Sparrow Cheung, Bryan Huang, Pete Chen and Alan Lau all made their marks on the day by advancing to Sunday's Day 2.

As the weekend commences, more and more players are expected to fill Paradise City Hotel & Resort in Incheon to continue building the budding prize pool ₩1,650,000 — or about $1,470 at current exchange rates — at a time.

The plan for Day 1b is nearly identical to Day 1a. Once again, cards are scheduled to fly at 2 p.m. local time. Once again, 12 levels are on top, which each one last 45 minutes and each player beginning with 30,000 in his or her chip stack. There will be no reentry allowed, but eliminated players can still fire on subsequent starting flights. Registration again ends after Level 9.

The big difference is there will be no dinner break in an effort to end things a bit earlier so players can enjoy the player party that PokerStars is providing.

PokerNews will be on hand throughout the day for live updates, so don't go far.