2009 PokerStars.net APPT Macau

APPT Macau Main Event
Day: 4
Event Info

2009 PokerStars.net APPT Macau

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
10k
Prize
$541,089
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,000
Prize Pool
$2,081,000
Entries
429
Level Info
Level
27
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
5,000

Seat 9: Pontus Kers, Gävle, Sweden (491,000 in chips)

Seat 9: Pontus Kers
Seat 9: Pontus Kers
This 25-year-old professional poker player is the latest in a long line of Scandinavian players to experience success on the APPT. He has been playing poker for five years and qualified for the long trip to the Far-East via a $20 rebuy event on PokerStars. His APPT Macau Main Event story is one of persistence – at numerous points on day three, he was the outright short stack but double-ups at crucial points helped him earn a final table slot. He has already experienced success here, having won the HKD $10,000 buy-in six-handed event at last year’s APPT, winning more than HKD $300,000.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Pontus Kers

Seat 8: Jicheng Su, Beijing, China (778,000 in chips)

Seat 8: Jicheng Su
Seat 8: Jicheng Su
What a dream start for this 28-year-old after reaching the final table of a major international event in his first ever tournament appearance. He qualified for the APPT Macau Main Event via a live satellite here at Pokerstars Macau. A salesman of computer software, he has been playing poker for less than two years and believes that skill is more important than luck in poker. He’s impressed all with his quiet but fierce determination, especially on day three where he was barely above the chip average for the entire session.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Jicheng Su

Seat 7: Darkhan Botabayev, Kazakhstan (1,455,000 in chips)

Seat 7: Darkhan Botabayev
Seat 7: Darkhan Botabayev
This 31-year-old Botabayev is no stranger to money, having worked in the banking sector for many years. Though he has shown great skill over the past few days amassing an impressive stack of almost 1.5 million, the married father of two confesses that the APPT Macau Main Event is his first major international tournament and he only took up the game two years ago. “Honestly, I don’t believe it,” the humble Botabayev said. “I have only ever played cash games and small tournaments in Russia. I’m so excited to play this final table!”

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Darkhan Botabayev

Seat 6: Dbinder Singh, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (696,000 in chips)

Seat 6: Dbinder Singh
Seat 6: Dbinder Singh
This 20-year old Singh came to Macau from Canada to play in the APPT Main Event. He plays poker professionally online as dajatt13 and has won a number of tournaments under that name, including a recent five-figure score in a $55 rebuy event on PokerStars. He usually plays tournaments at the $100 level and that is exactly how he won his entry to the APPT Macau Main Event. After moving onto a $500 satellite from the $100 hyper, he won his package and packed his bags. After three years of playing poker, he’s ready for a breakthrough win.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Dbinder Singh

Seat 5: Stefan Hjorthall, Sweden (454,000 in chips)

Seat 5: Stefan Hjorthall
Seat 5: Stefan Hjorthall
Displaying the enthusiasm and enjoyment that will make him a favourite with all at the final table, this 46-year old father of three laughed that he “left his kids in school and ran off to Macau” to play in Asia’s richest poker tournament. He won an $11 turbo satellite on PokerStars to take the single package in the prize pool. He’s been playing poker for three and a half years and has placed as high as 18th in the unofficial Swedish Championship. He also played in EPT Warsaw and busted out with none other than Team PokerStars Pro Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Stefan Hjorthall

Seat 4: Brandon Demes, Phoenix, Arizona, USA (578,000 in chips)

Seat 4: Brandon Demes
Seat 4: Brandon Demes
This 22-year-old “fell into poker” and has been playing for several years. He has one of the most impressive records of any player at the final table. A Sunday 500 winner on PokerStars earlier this year, he collected two cashes at the 2009 World Series of Poker. He was also fourth in chips after day two of the 2009 WSOP Main Event. Among the chip leaders throughout the APPT Macau Main Event (he actually led after day 1A), he takes 578,000 in chips into the final table, and is likely to have a major say in who’ll take out this tournament.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Brandon Demes

Seat 3: Daoxing Chen, Wenzhou City, China (1,747,000 in chips)

Seat 3: Daoxing Chen
Seat 3: Daoxing Chen
The man in the spotlight on day three of the APPT Macau Main Event, this PokerStars Macau regular had the crowd on his side as he charged back from the brink of elimination to the final table. Fondly known as “Bao Bao”, which loosely translates to “treasury”, this 47-year-old is married with two sons, and is the director of an investment/loan company. He bought in directly to this tournament, and has been playing Texas Hold’em for less than a year after learning the finer points of the game here at the Grand Lisboa.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Daoxing Chen

Seat 2: Mike Kim, Seoul, Korea (1,653,000 in chips)

Seat 2: Mike Kim
Seat 2: Mike Kim
The 42-year-old PokerStars Sponsored Player’s 20 years of poker experience has seen him take on many roles within the industry. Kim is a poker pioneer in the Asia market and has helped establish poker rooms in numerous locations. “It’s been the first time I’ve had a chance to play in one of these tournaments as I’ve been so busy. I’m more of a cash game player,” he said. His stack has rarely been under attack throughout the tournament, and he bolted to the top of the chip count late on day three after KOing big stack Mike Collins.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Mike Kim

Seat 1: Dermot Blain, Dublin, Ireland (507,000 in chips)

Seat 1: Dermot Blain
Seat 1: Dermot Blain
Having switched to playing poker full time from his original job as a sales manager, the 25-year-old resident of Dublin said that he has only won a few small tournaments live and online. He took up poker a few years ago after visiting a local sporting club in Derry; since then he’s been on the daily grind of a different kind. He experienced a taxing day three, having to work a short stack throughout the session. He is among the short stacks but will ride a wave of confidence into the Grand Lisboa tomorrow.

Player profiles courtesy of PokerStars Blog

Tags: Dermot Blain

From Nine to One

Daoxing Chen
Daoxing Chen
We're in a new setting today for the 2009 PokerStars.net Asia Pacific Poker Tour Macau Main Event. A small set has been built in the center of the Grand Lisboa casino floor, with limited stadium seating on the sides and fiercely bright spotlights illuminating the final table itself.

When we left last night, nine stalwart competitors remained from a field that first numbered 429. Those players are:

Seat 1: Dermot Blain (507,000)
Seat 2: Mike Kim (1,653,000)
Seat 3: Daoxing Chen (1,747,000)
Seat 4: Brandon Demes (578,000)
Seat 5: Stefan Hjorthall (454,000)
Seat 6: Dbinder Singh (696,000)
Seat 7: Darkhan Botabayev (1,455,000)
Seat 8: Jicheng Su (778,000)
Seat 9: Pontus Kers (491,000)

The structure for this tournament ensures that the clock will be rewound to allow for an average stack of 40 big blinds. That means we'll be starting at 10k/20k blinds today, rather than the ridiculous 20k/40k at which play ended last night.

We expect that chip leader Daoxing Chen will be put on notice very, very quickly that his glacial play and tendency to tank over every decision will not be tolerated. Hopefully that will encourage a quicker pace of play than we saw last night.

The action is set to begin in a few minutes time. We'll have a new champion in a few hours.