Level: 9
Blinds: 500/1,000
Ante: 100
Level: 9
Blinds: 500/1,000
Ante: 100
We wandered past Christina Lai’s table in time to see here move all-in from early position for 8,800 and action folded around to Laiheng Tse on the button. Tse mulled it over but let it go, as did the small blind and the action was on big blind Canlin Chen.
Chen flashed Lai the but folded so she survives to fight another day, though she will need to get bust soon as the level went up shortly afterward.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Christina Lai
|
11,100
-900
|
-900 |
Hong Kong’s Felix Lee is one of the bigger stacks in the field at present and we caught him in a hand against Taiwan’s Jack Wu and another opponent with a little over 6,000 in bets, blinds and antes in the pot and the flop spread [.
Lee, sitting in the big blind, had first stab opportunity and took it, leading out for 3,500. That was enough to get the player in middle position to give it up, and after thinking it over Wu too chose to let it go.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jack Wu |
60,000
42,900
|
42,900 |
Felix Lee | 50,000 |
We have been trying in vain to catch Gao Xing in action but so far no joy. We caught a hand earlier when she raised to 1,400 from the hi-jack on the last level, picking up two callers – a player in the cutoff and Bobby Zhang in the big blind – but the hand was over as soon as it started with Xing’s 2,700 c-bet on the flop enough to take it down.
Something similar happened the next time we walked past Xing’s table and she made it 2,000 to go from under-the-gun this time around and picked up two customers, a player in middle position and big blind Guangrui Meng.
The action went three-way to a flop of and Meng checked the action over to Xing, who continuation bet 3,500 with the middle position opponent her only caller.
The turn was the last card dealt as Xing quickly fired a second barrel, this one a larger 9,000. While he took his sweet time about it Xing’s opponent finally found the fold and Xing raked in yet another pot unopposed to climb to 75,000.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Gao Wenling
|
75,000
15,000
|
15,000 |
France’s Vu Chau Duong opened the action with a button raise to 2,400 and a player in the small blind moved all-in for his last 10,000 and Duong made a quick call.
The Frenchman had found on the button, which was in front of his opponent’s and stayed that way when the board ran out [.
Duong stacked up his new chips and climbed to 25,000 while his unfortunate opponent headed for the rail.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Vu Chau Doung
|
25,000
10,000
|
10,000 |
Level: 8
Blinds: 400/800
Ante: 100
The action is coming to the boil now and we have witnessed several competitors play big pots for their tournament lives – and at least for 50 percent of them, it all worked out.
Poker being a zero-sum game means that when someone wins, someone loses and the winner and loser in this particular case was Chih Wen Chen and Luo Jing respectively.
It was Chen who was the initial aggressor in this particular hand, making it 2,500 to go from early position and Jing moved all-in over the top for close to his 15,000 starting stack. Chen called quickly and the cards were turned over.
Chih Wen Chen:
Luo Jing:
The board ran out to see Chen win the classic race and bink a set and while Jing paired his king it was not enough and he hit the rail while Chen stacked up to 35,000.
We arrived at Yuefeng Pan’s table shortly afterward in time to see another big all-in confrontation, though this time it was on the flop that all the chips went in.
With the flop spread and close to 7,000 already in the pot Hong Kong’s Alfred Lee had led for 3,000 from middle position and been raised by Pan to the tune of 9,000.
Lee thought it over and looked Pan up and down suspiciously before moving all-in for close to 20,000 and Pan called extremely quickly.
Alfred Lee:
Yuefeng Pan:
Pan’s suited gap connectors had hit the flop hard and his two pairs were leading Lee’s top pair and that did not change when the turn and river completed the hand. Lee hit the rail and Pan stacked up to 55,000.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Yuefeng Pan |
55,000
24,900
|
24,900 |
Chih Wen Chen
|
35,000
20,000
|
20,000 |
Luo Jing
|
Busted | |
Alfred Lee
|
Busted |
Level: 7
Blinds: 300/600
Ante: 100
The 43 remaining Day 1D entrants are about to head off on their second break of the day, this time for 15-minutes as the green 25-chips are taken out of play.
Michael Chan's seat is conspicuously empty, but with the way his stack was yo-yoing that is not all that surprizing. Current table captain is Gao Xing who is sitting on a sizable 60,000 stack and while we saw her push Junzhong Loo off a hand pre-flop during the early levels we have not really seen her in action properly yet today – a fact we will rectify after the break.
Xing’s next closest rival is Malaysia's Chin Sun Tan and then there is a pretty big gap between the next closest stacks, which belong to Canlin Chen and Gab Yong Kim, but they have nowhere near as many chips as Xing. Here’s how the field is stacking up:
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Gao Wenling
|
60,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
Chin Sun Tan
|
50,000
35,000
|
35,000 |
Ping Cheong Fung |
34,200
19,200
|
19,200 |
Canlin Chen |
33,000
-1,500
|
-1,500 |
Gab Yong Kim |
32,500
-4,000
|
-4,000 |
Yuefeng Pan |
30,100
-17,900
|
-17,900 |
Yu Dong Yang
|
29,000
29,000
|
29,000 |
Victor Chong |
28,000
14,000
|
14,000 |
Justin Chan |
21,700
6,700
|
6,700 |
Hazel Chui
|
20,100
1,800
|
1,800 |
Jack Wu |
17,100
2,100
|
2,100 |
Junzhong Loo |
15,500
500
|
500 |
|
||
Andrew An |
13,200
-21,300
|
-21,300 |
Carson Wong |
12,200
-2,800
|
-2,800 |
Christina Lai
|
12,000
-2,100
|
-2,100 |
Michael Chan | Busted |