2017 PokerStars Festival Manila

Main Event
Day: 1a
Event Info

2017 PokerStars Festival Manila

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aj
Prize
4,676,000 PHP
Event Info
Buy-in
55,000 PHP
Prize Pool
28,809,000 PHP
Entries
594
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Zak Leads Action-packed PokerStars Festival Manila Day 1A Main Event

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante
Day 1A chip leader Elan Zak
Day 1A chip leader Elan Zak

Day 1A of the PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event saw 113 players pony up the PHP55,000 entry fee, but with the format offering unlimited re-entry 19 players chose to rail against fate and re-enter to bring the total number of entries up to 132.

The man leading the charge is the Philippines’ Elan Zak who bagged up an impressive 234,000 in chips – 27,800 more than next closest rival Hoa Thinh Nguyen who finished play with 206,200.

Zak powered into the top three spots midway through level eight and took it in turns to swap places with Vietnam’s Hoa Thinh Nguyen when the action began to heat up as the day’s play drew to a close.

While Nguyen held the lead for the majority of the last three levels Zak enjoyed a late run of form, rivering Broadway holding ace-king off suit in a hand against Australia’s Kenneth Buck to pad out his ample stack still further, though Buck managed to survive the day with a stack of 61,800.

Zak edged in front of Nguyen with just 15 minutes showing on the tournament clock at the end of level 12, granting him the honor of drawing the last number of hands to be played.

There was a last gasp burst of action as soon as the last six hands were announced and a number of players departed in a flurry of cards and chips with India’sKunal Patni and Aditya Sushant taking some brutal beats to bust right at the close of play.

Patni lost the majority of his chips after flopping the nut straight on a double diamond board in a huge cooler of a hand against Canada’s Thomas Lee, who had flopped bottom pair and a flush draw, which came in on the river to leave Patni crippled and push Lee over the six-figure mark.

Lee sent Patni to the rail the very next hand, alongside the unfortunateJohnson Tan in a double elimination that saw Lee, holding king-jack offsuit, attempt to push a short-stacked Tan out of the hand.

Tan made the call for his tournament life holding the dominated queen-jack and while Patni’s seven-four suited was drawing live, both Tan and Lee paired their jack on the flop and Lee’s king kicker played when the board bricked out for Tan. Lee finished the day with a very respectable 156,100, putting him in the top ten percent of the field.

Sushant followed Patni to the rail shortly afterward when his ace-queen offsuit was out-flopped by the speculative king-six suited ofChi Thinh Nguyen. Unfortunately for Sushant, the Vietnamese player flopped top pair on a king-high board, improving to two pairs on the turn to leave the Indian drawing dead.

While Sushant still had some chips remaining these also went the way of Nguyen not long afterward when the pair clashed in another hand. Nguyen moved all-in pre-flop once more, this time with ace-nine suited and Sushant called off the last of his chips with ten-seven suited.

Both players missed the board by miles meaning Nguyen’s ace-high was enough to win the hand and climb into third place on the leaderboard with a stack of 192,900 – just 13,300 less than fellow countryman Hoa Thinh Nguyen.

Other notables to make the cut included Pete Chen (165,300), Sparrow Cheung (120,200) and Alan Lau (42,600). With Cheung currently leading the Asia Player of the Year leaderboard, Lau in second place and Chen in third place that makes the APOY race an extremely tight one should any of the three players make the hallowed money spots when play resumes for Day 2 on Sunday 6 August.

It took Chen three bullets to lock up his Day 2 seat but the Taiwanese player is certainly in a decent spot as the fifth largest stack. Several other players were not so fortunate with Denmark’s Michael Falcon, Australia’s Vijay Narula and Israel’s Tom Or-Paz all firing three times and failing to go the distance.

A total of 38 players successfully circumnavigated the tournament minefield and will be returning to join Day 1B and 1C survivors when Day 2 begins at 2pm on 6 August.

Day 1B will kick off at 2pm on Friday 4 August so join us then as we see who else manages to make it though to Day 2 of the PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event.

Tags: Aditya SushantElan ZakHoa Thinh NguyenKenneth BuckKunal PatniMichael FalconPete ChenSparrow CheungThinh Nguyen ChiThomas LeeVan Sang Nguyen

Double For Chen

Level 10 : 600/1,200, 200 ante
Pete Chen
Pete Chen

Pete Chen is keeping his dreams of another Asia Player of the Year title alive after earning himself a double-up at the expense of an unfortunate tablemate to keep his Day 1A Main Event run going.

Pre-flop there was a middle position open to 2,500 and two calls before Chen moved all-in from the button for roughly 30,000.

The original raiser called and everyone else got out of the way.

“I was bluffing,” said Chen, turning over {a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}, which was trailing to his opponent’s {a-}{k-}

Chen caught a faint glimmer of hope for a chop when the flop fell {3-}{4-}{5-} but managed to pull in front when a {j-} hit the turn to give Chen top pair.

The {3-} river saw Chen lock in the double and he climbed to 68,000 after that timely catch.

Player Chips Progress
Pete Chen hk
Pete Chen
68,000
68,000
68,000

Tags: Pete Chen

Kim Takes From Narula, Okada Busts Li

Level 6 : 250/500, 75 ante
SJ Kim
SJ Kim

We caught Korea’s SJ Kim involved in a hand against Vijay Narula on a flop of {9-Diamonds}{2-Spades}{5-Diamonds} just as the latter checked the action over to Kim on the button.

Kim threw out a bet of 1,500, which Narula called to bring in the {6-Clubs} turn, which saw both players check.

After Narula checked for a third time on the {8-Spades} river Kim fired out a pot-sized bet, which was enough to take down the hand and he climbed to 49,500 while Narula dropped to 37,500.

The field shrunk a little more the following hand with Zhe Li the most recent casualty. Li had been nursing his short stack for the past few levels after losing that early big pot against Narula.

Pre-flop it was SJ Kim who was playing his rush, opening the action from the cutoff to 1,200. Li (button) moved all-in for his last 3,975 and Japan’s Ken Okada made a quick call from the small blind.

While he did not look too pleased at this turn of events Kim made the call after a brief visit to the think tank and the action went three-way to a flop of {k-Diamonds}{3-Spades}{q-Hearts}.

First to act Okada fired out a 5,000 bet, Kim folded immediately and the cards were turned over.

Ken Okada: {a-Spades}{k-Hearts}
Zhe Li: {a-Diamonds}{3-Spades}

While Li had caught a piece of the flop Okada’s piece was bigger and the {7-Clubs} turn and {4-Clubs} river saw Li head for the rail while Okada stacked up to 35,000.

Player Chips Progress
SJ Kim kr
SJ Kim
45,500
45,500
45,500
Ken Okada jp
Ken Okada
35,000
35,000
35,000
Zhe Li cn
Zhe Li
Busted

Tags: Ken OkadaSJ KimZhe Li

Oh Wow! Oh Kills Kumar and Falcon in One Hand

Level 2 : 75/150, 0 ante
Vikram Kumar
Vikram Kumar

The field in the Main Event has grown to 70 entrants, 65 of whom are still in the running. Two of the early casualties were Michael Falcon and Vikram Kumar, who have both recently fallen at the hands of Junhwan Oh, in the same hand.

It was Kumar who was the man to kick start the action with a raise to 350 from middle position with Oh making the call before a short stacked Michael Falcon moved all-in from the cutoff for 3,500 in total.

A player on the button made the call, as did both Kumar and Oh and the flop came down {k-Diamonds}{9-Spades}{2-Spades}.

This is where the fireworks happened and Kumar, first to act, led for 7,000 before Oh raised to 14,500. After the button got out of the way Kumar moved all-in for 22,500 in total and sent Oh deep into the tank.

Eventually, the Korean player made the call and the cards were turned over.

Vikram Kumar: {a-Spades}{j-Spades}
Junhwan Oh: {10-Spades}{j-Clubs}
Michael Falcon: {7-}{7-}

The {a-Clubs} turn put Kumar in the lead, but not for long as the {q-Hearts} river completed Oh’s gutshot straight draw, winning the Korean player the monster pot and sending both Kumar and Falcon to the rail in one fell swoop.

Player Chips Progress
Junghwan Oh kr
Junghwan Oh
69,000
39,000
39,000
Vikram Kumar in
Vikram Kumar
Busted
Michael Falcon dk
Michael Falcon
Busted

Tags: Junhwan OhMichael FalconVikram Kumar

Day 1A of the PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event Set to Start

The Grand Ballroom at City of Dreams
The Grand Ballroom at City of Dreams

Greetings poker fans, and welcome to the PokerStars Festival Manila as the City of Dreams casino hosts the first ever PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event for the next 5 days running from August 3-7, 2017.

Previously a hot stop on the APPT, PokerStars Festival Manila has now taken over as the headliner for poker in the Philippines. Settled right in the heart of the Entertainment City gaming strip, City of Dreams boasts an impressive ballroom for the tournament area, as well as a poker room for live cash games, which will run throughout the series with stakes starting at ₱25/50 all the way up to ₱200/400.

The series’ ₱55,000 Main Event, which starts on Thursday, August 3 at 2pm local time and has a guaranteed prize pool of ₱20 million.

PokerStars Festival Main Event history

YearPSF StopBuy InEntriesPrize PoolChampionPrizePrize (USD)
2016New Jersey$1,100208$201,760Jason Acosta$38,220$38,220
2017London£ 990944£ 824,112Rehman Kassam£89,320$111,638
2017Rozvadov€1,1001126€ 1,089,310Petr Svoboda€124,346$131,283
2017Chile$1,650329$500,000Christopher Franco$97,360$97,360
2017Marbella€1,100949€911,040Ignacio De Maturana€168,700$188,017
2017South KoreaKRW1,650,000285KRW414,675,000Taehoon HanKRW83,130,000$73,954.00
2017Lille€1,100800€768,000Philippe Le Touche€143,000$164,849
2017ManilaPHP55,000     
2017Bucharest€1,100     

The eventual winner of the Main Event will be crowned on August 7 after four days of play. Players will begin with 30,000 starting chips and will have to navigate through one of three Day 1s to make it through to Day 2.

PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event starting days (times are listed in local time):

Day 1a – August 3 at 2 p.m. (45-minute levels)
Day 1b – August 4 at 2 p.m. (45-minute levels)
Day 1c – August 5 at 2 p.m. (45-minute levels)

Registration will remain open through the first nine levels of play for each Day 1 with play closing out after the 12th level.

The survivors for each of the Day 1s will reconvene for Day 2 (August 6) and play will restart with one-hour levels. All players remaining after Day 2 will continue on Day 3 (August 7) where players will continue with 75-minute levels and will play down to a winner.

Here's a look at the structure for Day 1a:

LevelDurationSmall BlindBig BlindAnte
145 min50100 
245 min75150 
345 min10020025
445 min15030050
545 min20040050
645 min25050075
745 min300600100
845 min400800100
945 min5001,000100
1045 min6001,200200
1145 min8001,600200
1245 min1,0002,000300

Even though PokerStars Festival Manila Main Event is the main attraction, there are other noteworthy events to watch out for during the festival.

One particular tournament to keep an eye on is Day 2 of the ₱215,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller Shot Clock, which begins at 1pm local time and will play down until a champion is crowned.

Entrants only have 30 seconds to make each decision, with players also starting with three time bank chips, which will allow them to have extra time for difficult decisions. So far 18 players have successfully circumnavigated the tournament minefield, but with late registration open until the end of level 12 this figure could well increase.

The PokerNews live reporting team will be on the floor all day to bring you all the thrills and spills from both the Main Event and the High Roller Shot Clock so keep your browser locked to this page as we see who will rise and who will fall as Day 1A plays out.

Furthermore, you can also follow the action of the PokerStars Festival Main Event in Bucharest as well by following this link.