2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan

Main Event
Day: 1a
Event Info

2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
87
Prize
1,639,000 TWD
Event Info
Buy-in
27,500 TWD
Entries
306
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
60,000

Opening Flight of the Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event Draws 55 Entrants; Edwin Gerard Leads

Level 12 : 800/1,600, 1,600 ante
The USA's Edwin Gerard holds the chip lead after Day 1A of the Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event
The USA's Edwin Gerard holds the chip lead after Day 1A of the Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event

Boasting a TWD 5 million (~US$160,000) guarantee, the opening flight of the 2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event, Day 1A, saw a total of 55 entrants (46 unique) ante up the TWD 27,500 (~US$875) entry fee and fight it out at the felt, with 20 players able to bag up chips at the conclusion of the twelve 40-minute levels.

The man leading the charge is the USA's Edwin Gerard, who bagged up a massive 267,900 stack — giving him over 133 big blinds with which to return for Day 2.

Gerard has over $100,000 in live tournament cashes on his poker resume, three of them coming at final tables in countries ranging from the US, Macau, and Taiwan and looks to be in great shape at taking a shot at winning his first live tournament title.

The US player flew under the radar for much of the day before tangling with Taiwan's Hsiao Yun Yang on the second to last level of the day. Yang had held the top spot for the vast majority of the day's action with an aggressive play style that saw him steamroll all three tables he competed at and become the first player to reach and breach the 100,000-chip mark, but Gerard managed to get the best of him in two sizable pots to usurp his position at the top of the counts.

It was the second of the two pots that proved the most costly for the Taiwanese player; with both players sitting on top three stacks of over 125,000 apiece Gerard rivered the nut flush holding ace-trey of clubs to take a second big bite out of Yang's once-proud stack, leave him reeling like a punch drunk prizefighter and bring his chip count below the 100,000-mark. While Yang was able to make it through to Day 2, he was unable to reach his previous high, bagging up 56,300.

Others to bag big on Day 1A include Hong Kong's Howard Sun (116,200), Singapore's Si Yang Phua (116,600), China's Jieming Xu (104,300), Taiwan's Yu You Ci Tsai (102,500) and Hong Kong's Gabriel Fung (101,900), with the rest of the field all bagging up below the six-figure chip mark.

Other notables in the running included Taiwan's fifth most successful tournament player Chen An Lin and Singapore's Graeme Siow, though of the two only Lin managed to make it through with a stack of 45,000.

However, with the format offering players unlimited re-entry, any player unable to make the Day 2 cut can try their luck again tomorrow with both remaining starting flights playing out on Saturday, August 17. Day 1B gets underway at 1:00 p.m. local time and will follow exactly the same structure as Day 1A. Day 1C has a slightly later start time of 6:00 p.m. and will feature slightly shorter 30-minute levels.

The 21 Day 1A survivors will return for Day 2, which takes place at 1:00 p.m. local time (GMT+8) on Sunday, August 18 and the PokerNews live reporting team will be on hand to bring you all the tournament thrills and spills as the 2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan plays down to a scintillating conclusion.

Tags: Chen An LinEdwin GerardGraeme SiowHsiao Yun YangSi Yang PhuaYu You Ci Tsai

Lee and Gerard Close Out the Action With Big Hands

Level 12 : 800/1,600, 1,600 ante
Toh Soon Lee
Toh Soon Lee

The last two hands of Day 1A both proved to be exciting ones, with Toh Soon Lee and Edwin Gerard both finding big hands to rail an opponent each.

In the first, it was Lee and a short-stacked player who got all the chips in pre-flop, Lee's {a-Diamonds}{a-Spades} leading his opponent's speculative {6-Hearts}{5-Hearts} and staying in front the whole way on the {k-Clubs}{8-Spades}{q-Hearts}{10-Clubs}{9-Spades} runout to bag up 77,400 and send the short stack crashing out, right at the close.

In the second, a sizable three-way pot developed between chip leader Edwin Gerard, Zong Ping Yang, and another short-stacked player. It was Gerard the man driving the action with a middle position open to 4,500, with Yang making the call in the cutoff, and the short-stack making the call from the big blind to take the action three-way to a flop of {q-Spades}{5-Spades}{8-Spades}.

Following a check from the player in the big blind, Gerard fired out a 4,500 continuation bet and was called twice to bring the trio to the {2-Hearts} turn. This saw Gerard slow down and check it over to Yang, who reached for chips and made it 11,000 to go. The player in the big blind made the call, leaving himself 19,500 behind and Gerard had a decision to make.

After quite some time in the think tank, by which time the rest of the table not in the hand had bagged up, Gerard made the call, swelling the pot to a sizable 60,800.

The river was the {a-Spades} bringing in four to a flush. The big blind jammed in the rest of his stack, Gerard made a quick call, Yang bowed out and the cards were turned over.

The at-risk player in the big blind rolled over {10-Spades}{8-Hearts} for a pair of eights that had improved to a ten-high flush, but that was not enough to best Gerard's {k-Spades}{k-Diamonds} nut flush and the US player scooped a sizable pot to end the day's play and climb to 267,900, giving him a sizable lead to bring back on Day 2 on Sunday, August 18.

Player Chips Progress
Edwin Gerard us
Edwin Gerard
Day 1A Chip Leader
267,900 92,900
Soon Lee Toh sg
Soon Lee Toh
77,400 52,900
Zong-Ping Yang tw
Zong-Ping Yang
21,400 -8,600

Tags: Edwin GerardToh Soon LeeZong Ping Yang

Gerard Flushes Yang

Level 11 : 600/1,200, 1,200 ante
Edwin Gerard
Edwin Gerard

Hsiao Yun Yang's stock has fallen further and he is reeling like a punch drunk boxer after going another round with Edwin Gerard, who has padded his chip lead out still further at Yang's expense.

We picked up the action on the river in a blind vs blind battle between the two, just as Gerard fired out a 9,100 river bet into a pot of significantly more on a board reading {9-Hearts}{10-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}{2-Clubs}{8-Clubs}.

Yang called just as we arrived, and looked disgusted when Gerard turned over {a-Clubs}{3-Clubs} for the nut flush, pitching his cards into the muck and slumping to around 75,000 or so, while Gerard climbed to 175,000.

Player Chips Progress
Edwin Gerard us
Edwin Gerard
Day 1A Chip Leader
175,000 30,000
Hsiao Yun Yang tw
Hsiao Yun Yang
75,000 -50,000

Tags: Edwin GerardHsiao Yun Yang

Yam Wins a Small One, Yang Flushes Tong

Level 5 : 200/300, 300 ante
Edward Yam
Edward Yam

Edward Yam opened the action with a raise to 800 from the cutoff, with the player in the big blind choosing to defend. However, that was as exciting as the action got, with the {j-Hearts}{9-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds} flop bringing a check from the big blind and a 900 continuation bet from Yam, which was enough to take it down.

Hsiao Yun Yang has continued to climb, and we caught him in action in yet another chunky pot, this time against Bo Wei Tong. Action was picked up on the river with over 12,000 already in the pot and the community cards spread {2-Clubs}{2-Hearts}{j-Hearts}{4-Hearts}{3-Clubs}.

Tong (middle position) let out for 3,000 and neighbor Yang reached for raising chips once more, making it 13,000 to go in total. While he did not look thrilled about it, Tong pushed in the call, but could only slide his cards into the muck when Yang rolled over {a-Hearts}{6-Hearts} for the nut flush.

Player Chips Progress
Hsiao Yun Yang tw
Hsiao Yun Yang
142,300 27,300
Edward Yam hk
Edward Yam
43,500 13,500
Bo Wei Tong
Bo Wei Tong
15,400 -14,600

Tags: Edward YamHsiao Yun Yang

Chen An Lin Arrives, Field up to Four Tables

Level 3 : 75/150, 150 ante
Chen An Lin
Chen An Lin

Several new faces have arrived, the most recognizable of which belongs to Taiwan's Chen An Lin. With over $1.2 million in live tournament cashes under his belt and a slew of live title - 10 at the last count - Lin is the most accomplished player in the mix so far, and currently sits at #5 on the Taiwanese All Time Money List.

Hong Kong's Edward Yam is another familiar face with pedigree, with over $428,000 in live tournament cashes and 14 live titles on his poker resume.

Other new arrivals are Li Tsan Wa, Yu You Ci Tsai, Hao Kai Wu, Shan Guang Tsai, and Kuang Hung Lee, bringing the total feild up to 28 players, spread over four tables.

Player Chips Progress
Edward Yam hk
Edward Yam
30,000 30,000
Li Tsan Wa
Li Tsan Wa
30,000 30,000
Yu You Ci Tsai tw
Yu You Ci Tsai
30,000 30,000
Hao Kai Wu tw
Hao Kai Wu
30,000 30,000
Shan Guang Tsai
Shan Guang Tsai
30,000 30,000
Chen An Lin tw
Chen An Lin
30,000 30,000
Kuang Hung Lee tw
Kuang Hung Lee
30,000 30,000

Tags: Chen An LinEdward Yam

Welcome to the 2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event

Poker King Cup Taiwan Trophies
Poker King Cup Taiwan Trophies

Greeting poker fans, and welcome to the PokerNews coverage of the 2019 Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event.

The five-day, ten-event series, running August 16-20, is taking place at the Chinese Texas Hold’em Poker Association in Taipei, Taiwan, though the PokerNews live coverage will only be available for the Main Event. You can check out the full schedule and all the structures for the tournaments on the Poker King Club website.

With the TWD 27,500 (~US$875) Poker King Cup Main Event boasting a TWD 5 million (~US$160,000) guarantee, a sizable showing is expected for the Poker King tournament series' Taiwan debut.

This will be the first Poker King Cup Main Event hosted in Taiwan, and the organizers are pulling out all the stops to ensure it's a poker tournament to remember.

Running since 2016, the first showing of the successful Poker King tournament series took place in Manila, Philippines, drawing 279 entrants, with Hong Kong poker professional Jason Lo emerging victorious for a  ₱3,800,000 ($82,549) payday.

Numbers have continued to increase, and the 2017 Poker King Cup saw the series make its Macau debut at Venetian Macau, with the Main Event drawing a total of 490 entries and China's Longyun Li claiming the HK$1,225,500 ($157,438) top prize.

The last installment, the 2018 Poker King Cup, again took place at Venetian Macau with the Main Event drawing 518 entries and China's Weiran Pu taking down the HK$1,464,000 ($187,363) first-place prize.

Poker King Cup Events

EventVenueEntriesPrize PoolWinnerCountryPrize
Poker King Cup 2018Venetian Macau518HK$7,536,900/$964,576Weiran PuChinaHK$1,464,000/$187,363
Poker King Cup 2017Venetian Macau490HK$7,129,500/$915,918Longyun LiChinaHK$1,225,500/$157,438
Poker King Cup National Philippines 2016Poker King Club, Manila279 ₱3,800,000/$82,549Jason LoHong Kong₱857,100/$18,619

Boasting three separate starting flights, Day 1A of the Poker King Cup Taiwan Main Event takes place at 1:00 p.m. local time on Aug. 16 with Day 1B and Day 1C both scheduled for Aug. 17—Day 1B kicking off at 1:00 p.m. and Day 1C with a slightly later start time of 6:00 p.m. The 1:00 p.m. start time is also reserved for the start of Day 2 and the final day’s play on Aug. 19 and Aug. 20 respectively.

Registration remains open until the start of level 10 on all starting flights, which should be around 8:30 p.m. local time on the days where it kicks off at 1:00 p.m.

The tournament will utilize the Big Blind Ante format that is fast becoming commonplace, where the player in the big blind posts the ante for the whole table, and the format also offers multiple re-entry over the three starting flights so players unable to get through to Day 2 on Day 1A can fire multiple bullets over the three starting flights. Even those who make it through can re-enter, with the format offering best stack forward, meaning the player's largest stack will be taken through to Day 2, with any other stacks removed from play.

Players begin with a 30,000-chip starting stack, with level length for two of the three starting flights, Day 1A and Day 1B, coming in at 40-minutes, increasing to 60-minutes from Day 2 onwards. The third and final starting flight, Day 1C, boasts a turbo format with slightly shorter 30-minute levels, though all three starting flights will see players compete over 12 levels with breaks scheduled every three levels on the opening flights, and every two levels from Day 2 onward.

Main Event Day 1A Structure

LevelDurationSmall BlindBig BlindAnte
140501000
240751500
34075150150
  15-minute break  
440100200200
540200300300
640200400400
  10-minute break  
740300500500
840300600600
940400800800
  40-minute break  
10405001,0001,000
11406001,2001,200
12408001,6001,600

The PokerNews live coverage will begin as soon as cards are in the air for Day 1A at 1:00 p.m. sharp so stick around as we see who turns up and who makes Day 2 after the twelve 40-minute levels are done and dusted.