Ka Kwan Lau Wins the Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller Title in Macau
Ka Kwan "Kaju85" Lau emerged victorious in the HK$82,400 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller after playing heads up against Maksim Shuts, taking HK$950,000 (~US$122,277) at PokerStars Championship Macau.
Only 13 players out of a 36-entry strong field returned to the PokerStars Live Macau poker room at City of Dreams for Day 2 of the HK$82,400 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller event and Sam Greenwood was leading the field.
Almost all finalists encountered a roller coaster of emotions with plenty of all-in showdowns before a winner was crowned.
Lau, a poker pro who was born in Hong Kong but moved to Spain when he was four years old, considers Omaha one of his favorite games and showcased his skills at the tables.
Lau's best live score resulted from a fourth place in the EPT10 Prague Main Event. He also finished 20th in the 2016 World Series of Poker Main Event. The Spaniard then triumphed in the EPT13 Malta €10,300 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller back in November last year. His live tournament winnings are now close to $1 million.
Final Result Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller
Place | Player | Country | Prize (HKD) | Prize (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ka Kwan Lau | Spain | 950,000 | 122,277 |
2 | Maksim Shuts | Belarus | 656,500 | 84,500 |
3 | Felipe Ramos | Brazil | 419,000 | 53,930 |
4 | Daniel Geeng | USA | 321,000 | 41,317 |
5 | Fabian Geisel | Germany | 251,000 | 32,307 |
6 | Hok Lee | Hong Kong | 196,100 | 25,240 |
The day started with a triple up for Shuts, who returned for level 13 with just under five big blinds. Shuo Li joined the rail only minutes into Day 2. Isaac Haxton and David Wang then bowed out at almost the same time on different tables and there were only 10 hopefuls remaining.
Martin Kozlov lost the fight with his short stack. That set up the unofficial final table with the following seat assignments:
Seat | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Felipe Ramos | Brazil | 225,000 | 75 |
2 | Joseph Kushner | USA | 127,000 | 42 |
3 | Maksim Shuts | Belarus | 126,000 | 42 |
4 | Ka Kwan Lau | Spain | 250,000 | 83 |
5 | Sam Greenwood | Canada | 381,000 | 127 |
6 | Chun Yuan Wang | China | 44,000 | 14 |
7 | Daniel Geeng | USA | 260,000 | 86 |
8 | Hok Lee | Hong Kong | 128,000 | 42 |
9 | Fabian Geisel | Germany | 225,000 | 75 |
Only a few minutes passed and Chun Yuan Wang got half of his stack in via three-bet preflop, then shoved a paired ten-high board with two diamonds. Greenwood called with a double-suited ten and Wang's nut flush draw never arrived. What followed was an incredible festival of all-ins, double ups and more than three hours without elimination.
Ultimately, Joseph Kushner had to settle for eighth place, two off the money, when his short stack vanished with queen-ten-nine-eight against the ace-jack-ten-seven of Lau.
What followed was an incredible festival of all-ins.
Almost two hours later, Greenwood ended up as the bubble boy after being the dominating chip leader for most of the day. A series of lost showdowns saw the stack of the Canadian down to four big blinds, which he first doubled through Lau only to bust the very next hand.
Greenwood got it in preflop with pocket aces and Lau had jack-nine-seven-six double suited; the Spaniard turned an unbeatable straight and the money bubble burst.
After taking five hours to get from eight to six, the tournament would be over a mere hour later. Hok Lee got his stack in preflop with a single-suited ace and Fabian Geisel looked him up with ace-king-nine-five. Geisel flopped two pair and Lee was gone in sixth place.
Geisel's fortune lasted all but six minutes, as his flopped set of sixes were no match against Lau's flopped set of eights. Suddenly there were just four hopefuls remaining.
The latter then took a massive lead over his other two opponents.
Daniel Geen was then eliminated in fourth place after his double-suited queens ran into Lau's double-suited kings. The latter then took a massive lead over his other two opponents.
Until then, PokerStars Team Pro Felipe Ramos had nursed a short stack and laddered up several spots before getting most of his chips in preflop. Ramos flopped top pair with a king, and Lau called off the few remaining chips with bottom pair, then turned two pair to send Ramos to the rail.
Lau, who started Day 2 as second-biggest stack, held a 2-1 lead over Shuts, who himself returned with less than five big blinds when the action resumed at lunch time.
Less than 10 minutes later, it was all over.
Both players discussed a deal but couldn't agree on the numbers, and less than 10 minutes later, it was all over. In a big pot and repot hand, the flop came king-high with a flush draw and Shuts shoved with pocket aces and the nut flush draw.
Lau only had middle pair and a three-high flush draw, but spiked a blank three on the river to improve to two pair.
That was it from the Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller. The second edition of the Single-Day High Roller is fast approaching its final table. One further high-stakes tournament remains for the festival here in Macau: the HK$103,000 Shot Clock High Roller with single re-entry.
The event kicks off at 12 p.m. local time and will play down to a winner within the next three days. The PokerNews live reporting team will be on the floor to provide updates.