Level: 17
Blinds: 3,000/6,000
Ante: 500
Level: 17
Blinds: 3,000/6,000
Ante: 500
Here we are on the final day of the 2012 PokerStars.net Australia New Zealand Poker Tour Queenstown Snowfest Main Event. By the end of the day one player will walk away with all the glory, the NZD$110,600 first-place prize and the ANZPT trophy! The player best pressed to get it done is the chip leader heading into the day, Australia's Ken Demlakian, but he will certainly have his work cut out for him.
It all started six days ago when 149 hopefuls descended upon the SKYCITY Queenstown Casino in New Zealand. Unfortunately for 140 of those players, the dream ended at various points during the week. Fortunately for nine of them, here we are today at the final table.
A stacked final nine will take to the felt today, with some of the best young players Australia has to offer, along with some players who have proven themselves to be fearless over the last couple of days. If one thing is certain, it's that today will be an impressive display of tough poker. Biographies of each player can be seen below and this is how the final table will lineup.
2012 ANZPT Queenstown Snowfest Final Table
Seat | Player | Country | Chips |
1 | Matt Wakeman | Australia | 165,000 |
2 | Jordan Westmorland | Thailand | 523,500 |
3 | David Evans | Australia | 95,000 |
4 | Ken Demlakian | Australia | 529,500 |
5 | David Zhao | Australia | 511,000 |
6 | Bryan Huang | Singapore | 263,500 |
7 | Ricky Kroesen | Australia | 191,000 |
8 | Ivan Zalac | Australia | 92,500 |
9 | David Allan | Australia | 393,500 |
The final day is set to begin in around half an hour at 12:30 PM. Make sure to keep your computer screens locked to PokerNews as by the end of the day we will crown the newest ANZPT champion!
One of Australia's premier poker talents, Matt "mjw006" Wakeman is a 27-year old from Newcastle with a formidable online poker record. After getting started in home games with friends, Wakeman has dominated mid-high stakes tournaments online for the past five years, amassing more than USD$1.2 million in career winnings and earning the honour of Australia's #1 ranked online player.
Wakeman says that he has loved everything about his time here in Queenstown and is thankful for hitting a two-outer with pocket threes against Dave Allan's pocket jacks to help him reach this final table. Wakeman is a keen rugby league fan, he enters the final as one of the shorter stacks.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
One of our International players at the final table, Jordan Westmorland is an energetic American who now resides in Thailand in order to continue grinding online poker. With over USD$500,000 in lifetime online winnings under the handle "JWPRODIGY", Westmorland is starting to make an impression on the Asian live poker circuit after a cash result at the 2011 APPT Macau Main Event and final tabling at the recent Macau Poker Cup Red Dragon.
After winning a huge pot to end Day 3, Westmorland will carry the second biggest stack into play on this final table.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
David Evans is a Real Estate Agent who has flown a long way to be here from his home in Perth, Western Australia. Evans got started in poker through his local WA Poker League and has been playing for around five years. He won his way into this event through a PokerStars online satellite.
While Evans is largely unknown on the local scene, this is actually not his first major final table, after he finished sixth in a major poker event in Cebu in February for a USD$10,534 score. Away from the tables, Evans enjoys horse racing, so if he can win a few races early on the final table, he may be an outside chance at the title.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
Our chip leader entering the final table is Sydney's Ken Demlakian. A Structural Engineer by trade, Demlakian has been playing poker socially for a long time. He first got interested as a teenager before recently getting more involved in the game with his brother and his friends.
Demlakian can usually be found playing the $5/5 NLHE cash games, and this is his first tournament result of note. The most defining moment of this tournament for Demlakian was a devastating set-over-set hand that crippled Michael Kanaan. It proved to ultimately be the difference between chip leader and bubble boy.
Demlakian enjoys playing competitive tennis and basketball, and says that he has really enjoyed the variety of outside activities here in Queenstown.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
David Zhao is one of the most aggressive and talented young players in Australia, and will be very dangerous on this final table. Zhao is a 27-year old from Melbourne with seven years experience in the game. Zhao is normally found grinding the $5/5 and $5/10 No-Limit Hold'em cash games in Melbourne, but is also extremely competent in tournaments with a runner-up finish in the 2011 Melbourne Poker Championships to his credit.
Zhao won a key coinflip with pocket queens against the ace-king of Kristian Lunardi on the final hand of Day 2 to jump towards the top of the counts, and with a big stack in hand, he was never threatened as he dominated Day 3.
Zhao has loved Queenstown, and says the great food and friendly people have highlighted his trip so far. Winning the title will cap it off perfectly!
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
Team PokerStars Pro Bryan Huang is one of the most respected and decorated poker players in Asia, with over USD$500,000 in live tournament cashes to his credit. Huang is Singapore's all-time leading tournament money earner with his biggest result coming at the 2008 APPT Macau where he finished in third place.
The 2010 Asia Player of the Year has flown largely under the radar in this event, successfully forcing folds from his opponents to accumulate chips rather than taking unnecessary big risks. It's a strategy that has worked so far as Huang enters the final table nicely placed in the middle of the pack.
Hopefully Huang is able to get some rest as he has also qualified for the finals of the inaugural PokerStars Frisbee Golf Championships. Could we see a rare double here in Queenstown for the Team PokerStars Pro?
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
Earlier in the event, Huang chatted with our very own Nicki Pickering and things turned out to get a little crazy. All we can tell you is a sit-n-go was involved along with eating a muttonbird. Watch the video to find out more.
32-year old Ricky Kroesen has been playing poker for six years after getting started when he was invited to a $10 home game with some of his mates. It's a hobby that he's turned into a very profitable venture, with a string of results in Australia as a regular on the ANZ live poker circuit. Kroesen's biggest result was a runner-up finish in his home town tournament at the 2011 ANZPT Gold Coast. That result was worth AU$116,235, but he'll be keen to go one better at this final table.
Away from poker, Kroesen enjoys triathlons and touch football, and while he is blessed with plenty of sun back home, he also enjoys the snow, so he'll be hoping to squeeze in some skiing here in Queenstown.
Kroesen feels that his success in this tournament has come down to nothing but staying patient and avoiding mistakes. It's a solid game plan that will be tough for his opponents to crack on this final table.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.
Ivan Zalac is one of the most lovable characters that we've encountered on the ANZ tours. His personality away from the felt belies a deceptively-steely focus and determination to succeed on it.
Zalac has been playing poker for three years after first seeing the game on TV and jumping into his local pub poker tournaments. Zalac describes himself as a semi-professional player and has become a master of winning satellites into these events on PokerStars.
Zalac has already tasted success this week after winning the Pot-Limit Omaha trophy during the week, which he is looking forward to taking back home to show his biggest fans �� his wife and kids. Although, even as these bios were being written, Zalac was overheard asking about the structure for tonight's side event, so perhaps he's looking for yet another trophy... or two! He has some work ahead of him, though, entering the final table as the short stack of the field.
Bio courtesy of PokerStars.