2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau

Main Event
Day: 1e
Event Info

2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k9
Prize
1,605,472 HKD
Event Info
Buy-in
6,600 HKD
Entries
221
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
250,000 / 500,000
Ante
75,000

Weizhou Zha Leads Day 1E of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau

Level 14 : 1,500/3,000, 500 ante
Day 1E frontrunner Weizhou Zha
Day 1E frontrunner Weizhou Zha

The fifth of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau starting flights proved to be the most popular one yet and attracted 109 unique entries. With the format offering unlimited re-entries a further 14 extra bullets were fired to bring the total number of entries up to 123.

With 15 percent of the field locking up a Day 2 berth it took fourteen 40-minute levels to whittle this down the final eighteen with the battle for pole position a fierce, but thoroughly entertaining one

It was tough at the top with China’s Weizhou Zha and Mexico’s JC Alvarado duking it out for the top spot as the bubble approached. While it was Zha who edged in front as play concluded, bagging up a monstrous 270,200 in chips, it was Alvarado who closed out the day to finish hot on the Chinese player’s heels with a stack of 227,800. China’s Chen Bin (162,200) rounds out the top three.

Zha enjoyed a decent start to the day and climbed to the top of the table not long after registration closed, winning a race with ace-queen to beat an opponent’s pocket eights and become the first player to reach and breach the six-figure mark.

The Chinese player maintained his lead for the majority of the day, only losing it the once when JC Alvarado busted Linh Tran close to the bubble after the Vietnamese-Canadian moved all-in pre-flop with ace-eight suited and Alvarado woke up in the blinds with pocket queens.

However, it took Zha just minutes to edge back in front after attempting to pressure one of the shorter stacks. While Zha got all the chips in pre-flop with the dominated queen-five against his opponent’s ace-queen, the Chinese player had the chips to spare and caught his five to bring the field down to the bubble.

Not wanting to be outdone, Alvarado was the man to wrap up the day’s play calling the short-stacked shove of the unfortunate Lei Chen, who moved all-in pre-flop for a little over 10 big blinds holding ace-jack. The Mexican made the call from the blinds with queen-eight offsuit and immediately paired his eight before rivering two pair just to twist the knife and crush Chen’s Day 2 dreams.

Alvarado was one of the later entries, joining not long before the close of registration but really began to come into contention after winning a race with pocket fives against the ace-jack of Victor Chong.

Alvarado went on a rush so hot after this that it was a wonder he did not catch fire at the table and he was the only other player to finish play with over 200,000 in chips, though Chong also managed to make the cut with the rest of the Day 1E survivors stacking up as follows:

2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau Day 1E Survivors and Day 2 Draw

PositionNameCountryChip Count2A Table/Seat2B Table/Seat
1Weizhou ZhaChina270,2002-4-
2JC AlvaradoMexico227,8003-7-
3Chen BinChina162,200-6-9
4Cheng DongChina158,9009-6-
5Tang Wei CongChina152,4003-9-
6Chang Yu ChungTaiwan144,500-6-6
7Keng Po WongMacau111,100-10-1
8Fredric StephanFrance95,600-4-6
9Hua Bin HwangChina75,100-4-9
10Li Tsan WaHong Kong71,900-6-5
11Vincent Yiu Chung TongChina59,900-9-4
12Bin Rui WangChina59,5008-1-
13Guoliang WeiChina58,800-8-5
14Victor ChongMalaysia56,5007-9-
15Ip Ka LeungChina46,700-2-8
16Jianfeng XuChina38,5002-9-
17Song XiongChina35,6007-8-
18Sheng Yong WangChina19,9004-8-

Notables who came up short included Australia’s Bobby Zhang who entered late and could not find any traction, Hong Kong’sJustin Chan who lost a race with pocket Queens against the ace-king of Kun Huang, and as previously mentioned Canada’s Linh Tran.

Day 2A begins at 1pm on Wednesday, 29 November, with Day 2B playing out at the same time on Thursday, 30 November and the PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be on hand to cover all the Main Event tournament thrills and spills. Day 1F kicks off at 1pm local time (GMT+8) on Monday, 27 November so join us then as we see who else has what it takes to secure a Day 2 seat.

Tags: Andy Yingkit ChanBobby ZhangChen BinCheng DongIp Ka LeungJC AlvaradoJianfeng XuJustin ChanKeng Po WongKun HuangLinh TranNevan ChengTang Wei CongVictor ChongWeizhou Zha

JC Alvarado Washes Out Chen to Burst Bubble

Level 14 : 1,500/3,000, 500 ante
JC Alvarado bursts the bubble
JC Alvarado bursts the bubble

In what was quite possibly one of the shortest bubbles of all time - lasting all of two hands - the short-stacked Lei Chen moved all-in pre-flop from middle position and table messiah JC Alvarado made the call from the small blind.

Lei Chen: {a-Spades}{j-Diamonds}
JC Alvarado: {q-Diamonds}{8-Spades}

While Chen had the best hand, the way Alvarado had been running meant the result was almost a foregone conclusion. The Mexican paired his eight on the {5-Hearts}{8-Clubs}{10-Clubs} flop and the {6-Hearts} turn was not the ace or jack Chen needed to survive.

The {q-Hearts} river just rubbed salt into the wound and Chen headed for the exit empty handed while the remaining 18 players have all made HK$6,000 and guaranteed themselves a Day 2 seat.

Player Chips Progress
JC Alvarado mx
JC Alvarado
227,800 27,800
Lei Chen cn
Lei Chen
Busted

Tags: JC AlvaradoLei Chen

Zha Busts One to Take Lead

Level 10 : 600/1,200, 200 ante
Weizhou Zha currently sits at the top of the chip counts
Weizhou Zha currently sits at the top of the chip counts

China’s Weizhou Zha’s ascension to the top of the table is now complete – all he needs to do now is stay there.

Zha was helped in his climb by a player who gave us his name as ‘NBK’ but we’re pretty sure that’s not what his mother calls him.

The fact is irrespective anyway as Mr. NBK is no longer in the running after opening to 2,600 from under-the-gun and getting raised to the tune of 6,600. Mr. NBK moved all-in for 19,300 in total and with chips to spare Zha made the call.

Mr. NBK: {8-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}
Weizhou Zha: {a-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}

The {a-Spades} window saw NBK get to his feet and the rest of the {j-Spades}{3-Clubs} flop would not see him re-take it anytime soon. The {k-Diamonds} turn was not the eight he needed to survive, and neither was the {3-Diamonds} river and that was that.

Zha raked in the pot and that puts him right at the top of the table with a stack of 113,000.

Player Chips Progress
Weizhou Zhang cn
Weizhou Zhang
113,000 35,500

Tags: Weizhou Zha

Tong Takes Lead

Level 8 : 400/800, 100 ante
Vincent Tong
Vincent Tong

Things are progressing at a rapid pace this level and while the number of entrants has increased from 115 to 117 the number of players still seated has dropped from 83 down to 66.

That’s pretty speedy and several big stacks are emerging from this carnage. One of those belongs to Vincent Tong who has just padded it out at the expense of the unfortunate David Tai.

With three limpers already hoping for a cheap flop, Tong looked down at his cards in the small blind and splashed a chunky raise of 9,300 into the center of the table.

That was a big bet, but it did not deter big blind David Tai from pulling the trigger and getting his 13,600 stack into the middle. Once those pesky limpers folded out Tong wanted to know how much more it would cost him – 4,100 – and seemed happy enough to make the call.

David Tai: {10-Clubs}{10-Diamonds}
Vincent Tong: {a-Spades}{k-Diamonds}

Tai was the at-risk player and lost the race immediately on the {q-Clubs}{k-Hearts}{k-Clubs} flop with the {a-Hearts} turn hammering the final nail into his coffin and giving Tong an unbeatable full house. The {9-Diamonds} river was just a formality and Tai headed for the rail while Tong stacked up to 85,000, which we believe makes him the chip leader.

Player Chips Progress
Vincent Tong hk
Vincent Tong
85,000 85,000
David Tai hk
David Tai
Busted

Tags: David TaiVincent Tong

Wong Winning

Level 6 : 250/500, 75 ante
Keng Po Wong
Keng Po Wong

Macau’s Keng Po Wong has edged into an early lead, though he already had a sizable stack when we caught him in action against tablemate Yuchin Zhing.

We picked up the action on a flop of {9-Hearts}{7-Spades}{10-Diamonds} with 3,000 already in the pot and it appears Wong had decided to peel off a flop from the small blind against a Zhing button open.

Wong led for 1,000 and Zhing announced a raise, making it 2,500 to go in total. Wong called and the dealer burned and turned the {10-Spades} to pair the board. There was no betting on this street with Wong checking and Zhing checking it right back.

The {5-Spades} river saw Wong reach for chips once more and he fired for 2,000, which Zhing called after thinking it over for a few seconds. Wong turned over {q-Hearts}{10-Hearts} for rivered trip tens and Zhing threw his cards into the muck. Wong climbed to 57,000 making him one of the larger stacks, if not the largest stack, while Zhing dropped to 23,200.

Player Chips Progress
Keng Po Wong mo
Keng Po Wong
57,000 35,500
Yuchun Zheng cn
Yuchun Zheng
23,200 23,200

Tags: Keng Po WongYuchin Zhing

Zhao Bluffs Chan

Level 2 : 50/100, 0 ante
Zhao Yanchao
Zhao Yanchao

A good bluff is not just about throwing chips at a hand, it’s all about telling a believable story and it looks like one man who can spin a good yarn is Zhao Yanchao.

We caught the Chinese player in action in a pot against Justin Chan, who was kind enough to get us up to speed with the action. The community cards were spread {q-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds}{9-Clubs}{a-Spades}{6-Clubs} and there was close to 5,000 in the pot already and Chan (middle position) was facing a close to pot-sized Zhao bet of 4,500.

But how did we get here? Well according to Chan he opened the action pre-flop and Zhao had re-raised from the cutoff with Chan the only caller and then Zhao had barreled every street, with Chan calling him down.

It looks like Chan’s resolve waivered at the last though and he eventually found the fold a few seconds after we arrived. Zhao obligingly rolled over {7-Clubs}{3-Spades} for a ballsy stone cold triple barrel bluff. Great stuff.

Player Chips Progress
Zhao Yanchao cn
Zhao Yanchao
20,000 5,000
Justin Chan tw
Justin Chan
11,225 -3,775

Tags: Justin ChanZhao Yanchao

Day 1E of the Suncity Cup Finale Macau Set to Start

Day 1E of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau
Day 1E of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau

Welcome back poker fans to the PokerNews live coverage of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau, brought to you from the Poker King poker room at the Venetian Macau.

The ten-day festival, running Nov 23 – Dec 2, boasts a host of events including an HK$12,000 buy-in side event with an HK$1 million guarantee, an HK$80,000 buy-in High Roller event and an HK$20,000 buy-in deep-stacked tournament.

You can view the full schedule here

However, it is the $8M GTD Suncity Cup Main Event that will be attracting the most attention and this will be the only event with PokerNews live coverage.

Boasting an affordable HK$6,600 (~US$845) buy-in the tournament looks primed to attract an eclectic mix of keen recreational players and seasoned professionals, all eager to win a share of the HK$8M (~US$1M) guaranteed prize pool.

There are eight starting flights to chose from, including two with turbo structures, giving players the ultimate in flexibility when it comes to choosing when and how to begin their quest for glory.

Players buying into any of the Day 1 Main Event flights sit down with 15,000 chips and play eighteen 40-minute levels with blinds starting at 25/50. Late registration is open until the start of the level 10 and multiple re-entries are permitted while late registration is available.

Players are allowed to play more than one Day 1, but should they progress to Day 2 more than once, only their largest stack is taken through with them. Play continues on Day 1 until only 15 percent of the field remains, with these players making it to Day 2.

In a small twist, it is possible to buy into the HK$8 million guaranteed Main Event on Day 2A or Day 2B for HK$38,000 (US$4,850). Anyone taking this route will receive a 100,000-chip starting stack.

You can check out the full structure here

Everything you should know about the upcoming Suncity Cup

A total of 24 players have already locked up their Day 2 seat in the four prior legs that have already played out; the first in Jeju, Korea, running September 24-30, the second at the Poker King Club, Manila, Philippines, running October 13-16, the third at CLBC The Flagship, Taipei, Taiwan, running November 3-5 and the fourth taking place at Paradise City, Incheon, Korea, running November 10-12. A further 24 players have made it through from Days 1A, 1B, 1C and 1D of the 2017 Suncity Cup Finale Macau to bring the total number of Day 2 players up to 48:

2017 Suncity Cup Main Event Day 2 Qualifiers

PositionNameCountryChip Count2A Table/Seat2B Table/Seat
1Sahashi HidekiJapan374,2002-3-
2Hsiao JialingChina245,800-4-3
3Asakura YasuyukiJapan189,400-1-9
4Gab Yong KimKorea185,500-2-3
5Yu DongChina179,000-4-7
6Michael SoyzaMalaysia174,500-2-9
7Sam CheongMacau168,8007-6-
8Hsieh Chi HanTaiwan164,000-10-8
9Wai Kiat LeeMalaysia150,00010-9-
10Felix LeeHong Kong147,8004-2-
11Andrew AnUSA139,7002-5-
12Kuo Ting WeiTaiwan130,200-3-4
13Thomas LeeCanada120,000-5-1
14Percy ChaoHong Kong114,900-7-5
15Canlin ChenChina112,300-9-9
16Kilian LoefflerGermany108,6009-4-
17Chan Shin HungTaiwan105,500-4-8
18Trifie D. Montebon IIPhilippines105,0005-8-
19Chang Tian LinTaiwan102,5003-8-
20Sio Fat LauMacau97,700-9-5
21Chen Sheng WenTaiwan93,000-2-6
22Chen Wen KaiTaiwan92,0007-4-
23Keisuke HikosakaJapan91,000-8-1
24Hung Yu ShinTaiwan85,000-9-3
25Liao Po HaoTaiwan80,800-8-2
26Tsai Du MingTaiwan77,8006-1-
27Jack WuTaiwan76,500-3-3
28Chien Jen YenTaiwan67,8004-1-
29Phachara WongwichitThailand66,9002-7-
30Yao Jin ChenChina64,50010-4-
31Wu Chia YunTaiwan63,50010-2-
32Ye WangChina61,9009-5-
33Zhou QiangboChina60,0002-2-
34Joey WongHong Kong59,3008-7-
35Ping Cheong FungChina55,800-7-1
36Ho Yin SauMacau54,2001-4-
37Lin Chin AnTaiwan53,0001-3-
38Hong Cheng HanTaiwan50,8006-6-
39Youngee ParkKorea46,000-9-6
40Guangrui MengChina45,9007-5-
41Yueh Ko-ChiangTaiwan45,200-5-6
42Tsuyoshi IshibashiJapan44,9006-2-
43Chen YazhouChina39,4008-10-
44Ka Ho SunHong Kong37,400-9-2
45Yoshinori SugieJapan35,6003-1-
46Hei Yong MaChina33,3005-7-
47Pete ChenTaiwan26,200-6-3
48Wang Yong SiangTaiwan19,800-7-9

Day 2A begins at 1pm on Wednesday, 29 November, with Day 2B playing out at the same time on Thursday, 30 November and the PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be on hand to cover all the Main Event tournament thrills and spills. Day 1E kicks off at 1pm local time (GMT+8) on Monday, 27 November so join us then as we see who else has what it takes to secure a Day 2 seat.