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2014 World Series of Poker Asia-Pacific

$10,000 Main Event
Dias: 5
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker Asia-Pacific

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
66
Prémio
850,136 AUD
Event Info
Buy-in
10,000 AUD
Prize Pool
3,125,000 AUD
Entradas
329
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
26
Blinds
25,000 / 50,000
Ante
5,000

Scott Davies Wins the 2014 WSOP APAC Main Event for AU$850,136

Nível 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
2014 WSOP APAC Champ Scott Davies
2014 WSOP APAC Champ Scott Davies

This past summer, Scott Davies notched six cashes at the 2014 World Series of Poker, which included a fourth-place finish in the $10,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em for $111,942. Davis traveled from his home in Canada and headed to Australia for even more WSOP action, and now he’ll head home with a shiny gold bracelet and AU$850,136 in prize money after topping a field of 329 players to win the 2014 WSOP Asia-Pacific Main Event.

Action resumed in Level 24 (15,000/30,000/5,000) and it didn’t take long for the first elimination of the day to occur. On Hand #14, 2010 WSOP Player of the Year Frank Kassela raised to 90,000, and Ang Italiano, the last Australian in the field, called from the small blind. Italiano then moved all in on the {q-Clubs}{4-Clubs}{2-Diamonds} flop, and Kassela snap-called with the Kassela {q-Hearts}{10-Clubs}. Italiano had the {a-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}.

Kassela was well out in front with top pair, but Italiano picked up a big draw with the {K-Diamonds} turn. Unfortunately for her, and the dozens of railbirds supporting her, the {K-Hearts} blanked on the river and Italiano was out in sixth place for AU$118,769 — not too shabby considering she qualified for the tournament for AU$65.

Kassela took over the chip lead after that hand, but just six hands later Davies would double through him holding aces. One hand after that, Kassela would fall in fifth when he ran into aces yet again.

Kyle Montgomery was the next to go when his {a-Hearts}{k-Clubs} failed to improve against Davies’ {j-Spades}{j-Diamonds}, and then seven hands later, on Hand #38 in Level 25 (20,000/40,000/5,000), Henry Wang followed him out the door in third place when he shoved all in preflop holding the {k-Spades}{9-Spades} and ran smack dab into Davies’ {a-Spades}{a-Hearts}.

Heads-up play began fairly even between Davies and Jack Salter, who finished runner-up in the European Poker Tour Grand Final earlier this year, and the two wouldn’t fluctuate much over the course of the next 47 hands. The stacks were deep, and the players skilled, so it seemed destined to be a long night of poker, barring a big cooler, of course.

That cooler arrived on Hand #85 of the final table, which took place in Level 26 (25,000/50,000). It began when Salter opened for 105,000 and then called when Davies three-bet to 300,000. When the flop came down {6-Hearts}{10-Hearts}{10-Spades}, Davies bet 175,000, Salter called, and the {8-Spades} peeled off on the turn.

Davies bet what appeared to be 330,000, Salter raised to 930,000, and Davies took a moment before three-betting to 1.8 million. Salter thought for nearly two minutes before announcing that he was all in, and Davies snap-called.

Salter showed the {10-Clubs}{q-Clubs} for trip tens, and Davies had the {6-Diamonds}{6-Spades} for a flopped full house.

"I'll use my one time," Salter said, referencing Davies' use of it earlier at the final table. Both players were on their feet with Davies' arm slung over Salter's shoulder. They watched together as the dealer burned one last time and put out the {3-Spades}.

Salter had missed and would officially finish in second place, which came with a nice consolation prize of AU$516,960.

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Scott DaviesUSAAU$850,136
2Jack SalterEnglandAU$516,960
3Henry WangTaiwanAU$343,805
4Kyle MontgomeryUSAAU$231,287
5Frank KasselaUSAAU$164,089
6Ang ItalianoAustraliaAU$118,769

Congratulations to Scott Davies on winning his first gold bracelet and on becoming the 2014 WSOP Asia-Pacific Main Event champion.

That does it for PokerNews' coverage from Crown Casino in Melbourne, Australia. Thanks for tuning in, and we'll see you at the WSOP November Nine coming up in less than a month's time on November 10!

Tags: Scott Davies

Jack Salter Eliminated in 2nd Place (AU$516,960)

Nível 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Jack Salter - 2nd Place
Jack Salter - 2nd Place

Hand #82: Scott Davies raised to 125,000 from the button and Jack Salter folded.

Hand #83: Salter raised to 105,000 and Davies folded.

Hand #84: It appeared Davies gave Salter a walk.

Hand #85: In what would be the final hand of the tournament, Salter opened for 105,000 and then called when Davies three-bet to 300,000. When the flop came down {6-Hearts}{10-Hearts}{10-Spades}, Davies bet 175,000, Salter called, and the {8-Spades} peeled off on the turn.

Davies bet what appeared to be 330,000, Salter raised to 930,000, and Davies took a moment before three-betting to 1.8 million. Salter thought for nearly two minutes before announcing that he was all in and Davies snap-called. It was a cooler.

Salter: {10-Clubs}{q-Clubs}
Davies: {6-Diamonds}{6-Spades}

Salter had flopped trip tens, but Davies had flopped sixes full.

"I'll use my one time," Salter said, referencing Davies' use of it earlier at the final table. Both players were on their feet with Davies' arm slung over Salter's shoulder. They watched together as the dealer burned one last time and put out the {3-Spades}.

Salter missed and finished as runner-up, which comes with a nice consolation prize of AU$516,960.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Scott Davies us
Scott Davies
WSOP 1X Winner
9,870,000 4,555,000
Jack Salter gb
Jack Salter
Eliminado

Tags: Jack SalterScott Davies

Henry Wang Eliminated in 3rd Place (AU$343,805)

Nível 25 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Henry Wang - 3rd Place
Henry Wang - 3rd Place

Hand #35: Scott Davies raised to 80,000 from the button and Jack Salter defended from the big blind. Both players checked the {2-Hearts}{3-Hearts}{7-Clubs} flop as well as the {K-Clubs} turn, and then Davies bet 45,000 on the {A-Hearts} river. Salter called but mucked just as soon as Davies rolled over the {a-Clubs}{q-Spades}.

Hand #36: Henry Wang raised to 100,000 from the button, Davies called from the big blind, and then both players checked the {10-Spades}{7-Hearts}{9-Diamonds} flop. Wang called a bet of 60,000 on the {3-Clubs} turn, but folded to one of 190,000 on the {7-Diamonds} river.

Hand #37: Salter raised to 85,000 on the button, Davies and Wang called from the small and big blind respectively, and the flop came down {5-Hearts}{4-Diamonds}{2-Clubs}. Two checks saw Salter bet 110,000, only Wang called, and then both players checked the {10-Diamonds} turn. When the {3-Spades} completed the board on the river, Wang checked for a third time and folded when Salter bet 190,000.

Hand #38: Davies opened for 80,000 from the button and Wang three-bet jammed for roughly 800,000. Salter got out of the way and Davies snap-called.

Davies: {a-Spades}{a-Hearts}
Wang: {k-Spades}{9-Spades}

"Two spades on the flop please," Wang said as he stood up. Davies was already standing as were the railbirds in Studio 3.

The {2-Clubs}{q-Clubs}{k-Diamonds} flop gave Wang a sweat, and a smile crossed his face. The {4-Hearts} turn meant he needed either a king or nine on the river, and he wasn't shy about asking for it.

"You can do it," he told the dealer. "Deep breath. Deal the nine of diamonds. Nine of diamonds only."

The crowd got a good laugh, and it'd be the last time Wang entertained as the {2-Diamonds} river put an end to his 2014 WSOP APAC Main Event in third place for AU$343,805.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Henry Wang au
Henry Wang
Eliminado

Tags: Henry WangScott DaviesJack Salter

Kyle Montgomery Eliminated in 4th Place (AU$231,287)

Nível 25 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Kyle Montgomery - 4th Place
Kyle Montgomery - 4th Place

Hand #27: Jack Salter raised to 85,000 and claimed the blinds and antes, he showed ace-jack.

Hand #28: Scott Davies raised to 80,000 from the cutoff and Salter called in the big blind. The Brit check-called 110,000 on the {K-Diamonds} {Q-Diamonds} {A-Clubs} flop and then bet the {9-Spades} turn for 195,000 to take down the pot.

Hand #29: Salter limped from the small blind and Davies checked his option one seat over. On the {J-Clubs} {8-Hearts} {Q-Hearts} flop, Salter led out and Davies quickly mucked his cards.

Hand #30: Henry Wang made it 85,000 to go and scooped the blinds and antes.

Hand #31: Salter raised to 85,000, Davies three-bet to 205,000 on the button and Kyle Montgomery moved all in from the small blind. Wang in the big blind as well as Salter folded whereas Davies called.

Montgomery: {A-Hearts} {K-Clubs}
Davies: {J-Spades} {J-Diamonds}

Before the flop was dealt, Davies asked for his one time. "I never asked for it in my life," he said with a grin on the face. The {4-Hearts} {7-Hearts} {9-Diamonds} flop was good for Davies and the {2-Spades} on the turn changed nothing either. While Montgomery remained very calm, Davies walked around the table, impatiently waiting for the river to fall. The {5-Hearts} completed the board and the rail of Davies cheered loudly.

Montgomery was eliminated in 4th place for a payday of AU$231,287 and Davies is now almost even in chips with Salter.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Scott Davies us
Scott Davies
WSOP 1X Winner
4,200,000 1,350,000
Kyle Montgomery us
Kyle Montgomery
Eliminado

Tags: Henry WangJack SalterKyle MontgomeryScott Davies

Frank Kassela Elimiated in 5th Place (AU$164,089)

Nível 24 : 15,000/30,000, 5,000 ante
Frank Kassela - 5th Place
Frank Kassela - 5th Place

Hand #21: Jack Salter had the button and action folded to him. He raised to 65,000, and then Frank Kassela, who made this final table looking for a third gold bracelet, reraised to 100,000 out of the small blind. Play got back to Salter, and he made it 240,000 to go with a four-bet. Kassela didn't back down and reraised to 525,000 with around 600,000-700,000 behind. Salter just called, and the two were going to a flop with over a million chips in the middle.

On the {7-Diamonds}{6-Hearts}{5-Clubs} flop, Kassela moved all in almost immediately. Salter double checked his hand and then quickly called. Kassela showed the {A-Hearts}{Q-Spades}, and Salter had the {A-Clubs}{A-Diamonds}.

The turn was the {7-Spades}, the {10-Clubs} landed on the river, and Kassela was off to the rail.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Jack Salter gb
Jack Salter
4,300,000 1,045,000
Frank Kassela us
Frank Kassela
WSOP 3X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: Frank KasselaJack Salter

Ang Italiano Eliminated in 6th Place (AU$118,769)

Nível 24 : 15,000/30,000, 5,000 ante
Ang Italiano - 6th Place
Ang Italiano - 6th Place

Hand #13: Kyle Montgomery had the button to start the hand, and Jack Salter opened from under the gun to 65,000. Henry Wang called from the small blind, and then checked the {10-Clubs}{6-Hearts}{5-Hearts} flop to the preflop raiser. Salter bet 130,000, and Wang folded.

hand #14: From under the gun, Frank Kassela raised to 90,000. Action folded to Ang Italiano in the small blind, and she took some time to think over her decision before making the call. Jack Salter folded from the big blind, and the flop came down {Q-Clubs}{4-Clubs}{2-Diamonds}.

Italiano quickly moved all in on the flop, and Kassela snapped her off with the {Q-Hearts}{10-Clubs} for top pair. Italiano was caught with her hand in the cookie jar holding the {A-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}.

The turn brought the {K-Diamonds}, and that gave Italiano an entire new world of hope as she picked up straight and flush draws to go along with her over card ace. Her rail of supporters cheered profusely for Italiano to hit, but all the deck could produce was the {K-Hearts} on the river and she was done.

Italiano was certainly the true "feel good" story of this final table, having won her seat into this event for just AU$130. She played two "Phase One" AU$65 satellites and won her second to earn entry into an AU$250 "Phase Two." She won that before winning a AU$1,100 "Phase Three" to win her seat in this Main Event. That means she saw a 91,260% increase on her original investment after walking away with a payday of AU$118,769.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Frank Kassela us
Frank Kassela
WSOP 3X Winner
3,050,000 1,800,000
Ang Italiano au
Ang Italiano
Eliminado

Tags: Ang ItalianoAngela ItalianoFrank KasselaHenry WangJack SalterKyle Montgomery

Seat 1: Frank Kassela -- 1,250,000

Frank Kassela
Frank Kassela

Frank Kassela has been recording cashes in live poker tournaments for over a decade, but it wasn't until 2010 that he truly emerged onto the scene thanks to an excellent performance at the World Series of Poker.

It was that year that Kassela won two gold bracelets, finished third in the $25,000 Six-Max No-Limit Hold'em event, and cashed three other times to earn the honor of the 2010 WSOP Player of the Year. For that performance, Kassela's banner will forever hang on the walls during the summer, and he'll be looking to add to his story with a win here in the 2014 WSOP Asia-Pacific Main Event.

Outside of his great 2010 WSOP, Kassela made the final table of the $50,000 Poker Players' Championship this year, placing sixth for $212,829, and he cashed in the $40,000 No-Limit Hold'em 40th Anniversary Event in 2009 for $71,858.

Kassela is married, 46 years old, and has five children. He also has $2,638,222 in live tournament earnings and will be adding at least AU$118,769 to that total today. He is a small business owner and resides in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Coming into this final table, Kassela is fourth in chips with 1,250,000.

Tags: Frank Kassela

Seat 2: Scott Davies -- 2,210,000

Scott Davies
Scott Davies

In the first four years of his live tournament endeavors, Scott Davies hadn't earned more than $70,300 in a single year. He's going to top that just from this result alone and will add to the $218,829 he's earned in 2014 having a career year.

He also has the chance to earn his largest live tournament score ever if he can finish in fifth place or higher. Given that Davies will enter Day 5 with the second most chips, we like his chances to do just that.

Davies is originally from New Jersey in the US, but he now resides in Vancouver, Canada. He attended the University of Miami, and the Miami Hurricanes are his favorite sports team. He's 33 years old and has both graduated law school and passed the bar exam.

Davies is making his eighth World Series of Poker cash of the year in this event. His best came in the $10,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold'em during the summer where he finished in fourth place for $111,942.

Tags: Scott Davies

Seat 3: Kyle Montgomery -- 950,000

Kyle Montgomery
Kyle Montgomery

Kyle Montgomery is a 27-year-old professional poker player who transplanted himself from Indiana in the US to right here in Melbourne, Australia. He lists his greatest poker accomplishment as becoming a Supernova Elite on PokerStars "many times," although this final table could certainly change that.

Looking into the record books, no live tournament cashes were found for Montgomery, but that doesn't mean he doesn't have game. It takes a lot of tough grinding to become a Superova Elite, and even former World Series of Poker Main Event champion Greg Merson gave a shoutout to Montgomery on Twitter, calling him "one of the sickest grinders I know."

Montgomery's favorite sports teams are the Indianapolis Colts and Indiana Pacers. The Colts quarterback, Andrew Luck, is know for his young, athletic ability with great intelligence and a knack for pulling off late comebacks. A comeback is what Montgomery will be hoping to do here as he enters the final day fifth in chips with 950,000.

Tags: Greg MersonKyle Montgomery

Seat 4: Henry Wang -- 1,700,000

Henry Wang
Henry Wang

Taiwan's Henry Wang is a 50-year-old retired teacher, and he lists his greatest accomplishment as being able to retire at 45 years old. Wang is now locked and loaded for Day 5 of the 2014 World Series of Poker Asia-Pacific Main Event hoping to pad that retirement fund a bit more.

According to HendonMob.com, Wang boasts $82,940 in live tournament earnings, and that's all come from events in Macau dating back to 2011. His best cash was for just under $20,000, but that will pale in comparison to the result he'll end up with here, as he's already locked up at least AU$118,769.

With 1,700,000 in chips, Wang is third overall entering the final day. He lists his favorite sports team as the Atlanta Hawks and will be looking to become this final table's "Human Highlight Film," just like Dominique Wilkins was for the Hawks.

Tags: Dominique WilkinsHenry Wang