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May , 2012
Friday
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RANDY LEW 2011 APPT MACAU CHAMPION

Posted by Editor On November - 30 - 2011 Comments Off

The Asia Pacific Poker Tour Macau Main Event has come to a close and we’ve crowned a new champion with PokerStars Team Online member Randy “nanonoko” Lew proving that he can adapt his game from the virtual world onto the live felt with a stunning breakthough victory.

Wind the clock back fourteen hours and Lew was one of fifteen players who returned to the PokerStars Macau Poker Room in the Grand Lisboa Hotel and Casino for the final day of play. Leading the way was India’s Sangeeth Mohan, but Lew was always going to be one to watch in a field that also included experienced pros David Steicke, Jeff Rossiter and Dao Xing “Bobo” Chen.

Only nine would make the official APPT final table with Sparrow Cheung, Josh Barrett, Tsugunari Toma, Dao Xing Chen and Baton Fung were sent to the rail early in the day, before a defining hand of the day saw overnight chip leader Sangeeth Mohan bubble the final table in 10th place.

In a four-bet pot, Mohan flopped top set of queens against the Royal Flush draw of Kai Yat Fam, but Mohan couldn’t hold as a third diamond on board delivered the flush to jump Fam into the chip lead as our final table was set.

Randy Lew entered the final table as the short stack and waited patiently for his moment to strike. Pocket queens seemed like the perfect moment but he walked his ladies straight into the pocket aces of David Steicke. Such is the nature of tournament poker that one bad beat can be the difference between victory and defeat, as Lew caught a third queen to crack Steicke’s aces and he was eliminated in 9th place soon after.

Fabian Spielmann and Jeff Rossiter started to accumulate chips, with Rossiter’s deceptively-played pocket aces jumping him up into the chip lead. He extended that advantage further when pocket eights paid dividends twice. First Rossiter dispatched Tan Tei Zheng and his pocket deuces in 8th place before winning a flip against Swede Daniel Nordstrom’s ace-king to see him to the rail in 7th.

Kai Yat Fam was next to crack when he shoved the button with ace-four but Randy Lew called with pocket tens in the big blind. The tens were good to Lew as the board ran out 4♥J♣3♦9♥6♣ to see Fam head to the cashier to collect 6th place prizemoney.

Lew was slowly moving up the leaderboard and after the dinner he kicked it into the next gear with an amazing hand that saw the end of Zuo Wang.

Wang was short-stacked and all in preflop with both Lew and Rossiter making the call. As expected, the two live players checked down a board of 7♠A♣9♣T♦8♦ until the river where Lew checked it to Rossiter who bet 700,000 into a dry side pot. Lew then check-raised an additional 1,000,000 with Rossiter making the call holding J♣T♣ for a straight. However Lew opened Q♦J♠ for the nut straight as Wang could only shake his head as his 9♥9♠ had been run down.

Rossiter recovered with the elimination of Fabian Spielmann in 4th place when Rossiter’s A♣Q♣ improved to a flush to better Spielmann’s K♠T♠ top pair hand. This brought us to three-handed play and one of the most intriguing combinations of players we’ve seen for some time on the APPT.

Jimmy Pan, Jeff Rossiter and Randy Lew were all young, highly talented, super aggressive players and it made for some fascinating play and psychology.

Pan was the short stack but fought hard to get himself back into the contest with some well-timed three-bets. Lew slipped back but found two double ups through Jeff Rossiter to stay alive. The first one saw Lew’s A♣7♠ hold against Rossiter’s K♦Q♠ before a genuine coin flip saw Lew’s T♣T♠ survive against Rossiter’s A♠J♥.

That left Rossiter on the brink and he couldn’t recover as he made a final stand with 9♠T♥ but fell to the A♥Q♣ of Jimmy Pan.

Randy Lew held a narrow lead as an entertaining heads-up contest got underway against Jimmy Pan.

Pan chipped away with preflop aggression, while Lew caught some handy cards, including a set of tens and a full house with A♠7♠ to extend his advantage.

Jimmy Pan again reeled it back in and had a chance to win it all with A♦9♠ against Lew’s pocket sixes but again the PokerStars Team Online player spiked a set to stay alive.

That left Pan reeling and despite some well-timed aggression, lady luck just wasn’t on his side. The final hand came with the two committing their chips on a flop of Q♥T♠8♠ with Lew flopping two pair with Q♦T♣ to better the K♦Q♠ of Pan. The 5♦ turn and J♣ river couldn’t connect as Randy Lew was crowned the APPT Macau champion!

Randy Lew now confirms his status as a member of PokerStars Team Online with a breakthrough major live victory to add to an impressive poker resume.

Final Table Payouts
1st Randy Lew (Canada) $3,772,000
2nd Jimmy Pan (Macau) $2,367,000
3rd Jeff Rossiter (Australia) $1,306,000
4th Fabian Spielmann (Germany) $1,019,000
5th Zuo Wang (China) $809,000
6th Kai Yat Fam (Singapore) $653,000
7th Daniel Nordstrom (Sweden) $498,000
8th Tan Tai Zheng (Singapore) $373,000
9th David Steicke (Hong Kong) $263,300

By Heath Chick
Sponsored by PokerStars.net

DANNY CHEVALIER: 2011 ANZ PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Posted by Editor On October - 10 - 2011 Comments Off

The focus on the final day of ANZPT Darwin was undoubtedly the heads-up duel between Leo Boxell and Danny Chevalier for the ANZ Player of the Year title. A heavyweight battle of the titans that had gone a full eleven rounds, with Boxell a narrow points leader and Chevalier looking for the knockout last round blow.

After Scott van Loon, Tim Wade-McDonald and Liam O’Rourke were early casualties, eyes were fixed on Leo Boxell when he moved his short stack into the middle with both Danny Chevalier and Jamie Hill coming along.

Chevalier was quick to check the board down and Hill obliged as it arrived K♠K♠7♣2Q. Boxell had to beat two opponents and he was first to show as he tabled AT♣ which notched Chevalier’s A♣9. Could Boxell really survive with just ace-high? Alas, it wasn’t to be as Hill’s 55♦ were enough to eliminate the Australian legend.

Boxell was forced to sweat the action from the rail as Chevalier shut up shop, knowing that a top ten finish would be enough to claim points and POTY honours.

The gallant run of PokerStars qualifier James Park came to an end when he ran top pair into the pocket aces of New Caledonia’s Jonathan Dangio while Ryan McKay ran into trouble against Jack Drake with a one-two blow eliminating McKay in unlucky 13th place.

It was a day for the comeback kids, with Aaron Benton turning things around from just seven big blinds while Michael Guzzardi was down to around four big blinds but somehow picked the right spots to steal blinds and antes to recover.

The short-stacked survival left Danny Chevalier nervously awaiting the points bubble as he frequently left his chair to carefully watch the progress of the short stacks.

Eventually something had to give and it was local Tony Kanochkin who was next to fall. He moved in with K♠Q but ran into a dominant A♠K held by Brett Dennevig. The board bricked out and Danny Chevalier gave himself a celebratory fist pump and received a nice round of applause as the ANZ Player of the Year award was now officially his.

By Heath Chick
Sponsored by PokerStars.net
Photos: Kirsty Chick

JACK DRAKE WINS ANZPT DARWIN TITLE

Posted by Editor On October - 10 - 2011 Comments Off

Adelaide… Perth… Sydney… Gold Coast… Canberra… Queenstown… Melbourne… Darwin…

The 2011 Australia New Zealand Poker Tour has been an incredible ride as we’ve ventured to new locations, seen some amazing highlights and unearthed some of the brightest poker talent in the region.

From Octavian Voegele’s dominant win in Adelaide to Grant Levy’s epic victory in Perth. Lee Nelson’s win for the ages in Melbourne and the ultra-consistency of Jesse McKenzie, Leo Boxell and Player of the Year Danny Chevalier. And now 28-year old Queenslander Jack Drake adds his name to the record books as our newest ANZPT champion.

Drake was impressive throughout the ANZPT Darwin Main Event across the four challenging days of poker inside the SKYCITY Darwin Casino. While many of his better-known counterparts threw uppercuts and hooks to attempt to land a knockout blow, Drake was content to throw jabs from the outside and rarely had his tournament life in jeopardy. It was a mature, composed exhibition of poker and perhaps the start of something even bigger in his blossoming career.

At the start of the day, Drake would have been relieved to see the early eliminations of Aaron Benton and Danny Chevalier – the two most experienced players at the table. Benton played four pots and lost them all while Chevalier had his pocket aces unfortunately cracked by Jamie Hill who rivered trips.

Following his elimination, we had a chance to catch up with Chevalier for his thoughts on the ANZ Player of the Year award…

“In the last month when it became a realistic possibility, I was very, very keen to achieve it. In fact, I became very single-minded about it. When I came here to Darwin, I had just one intention and that was to make the points. It was a very exciting finish with Jesse and Leo and it was a relief when Jesse busted as I had second place at least. I just concentrated on my game – surviving. I knew what I had to do so I just kept at it.”

“Coming into the final table I was very relaxed. I was just happy to be there. Making the points yesterday was my final table. No matter what happened today I was happy.”

Chevalier plans to use his POTY prize to head to the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure in January as well as play the APPT and ANZPT events next season.

As play continued, the short-stacked Glenn Parry fought back well from being crippled on the bubble to collecting a nice payday for his seventh place before Jamie Hill was jacked by Drake when Hill’s A4 was outflopped by Drake’s J5 when a jack hit the flop. It wouldn’t be the last time we would see that happen.

New Caledonian PokerStars Qualifier Jonathan Dangio looked dangerous throughout the final table, especially early on when a burst of big cards, including pocket aces three times within the first two hours, saw him climb to the chip lead. However the aces failed him when Fotios Manolakos turned a straight and rivered a sweet king-high straight flush.

From there Dangio was on the short stack and couldn’t recover. He three-bet shoved his pocket threes and Drake was again the destroyer as his K9♠ paired both cards on the board.

However it wasn’t all smooth sailing for the Queenslander as he exchanged chips back and forth in a titanic struggle with local Mark Taylor. Drake doubled up the short stack with his A♣Q falling to Taylor’s K♠J before Drake got some revenge moments later with his 68♣ catching a pair against Taylor’s A♣3. It was one of the rare moments that Drake needed some luck and, crucially, he found it.

At the dinner break, Brett Dannevig was the chip leader but with stomachs satisfied the pace of play picked up following the break.

Fotios Manolakos found some luck when he rivered a three-outer when his K♣9♠ caught a nine-ball against Mark Taylor’s K♠Q, before Taylor’s defiant run came to an end in fourth place. Taylor had doubled up on numerous occasions throughout the day, and would never say die, but the good run ended when his 66♠ fell behind the Q♠J♠ of Jack Drake when a jack appeared on the flop.

Maybe there’s something in a name as Jack Drake’s love affair with the knave continued soon after when he called the all-in bet of Fotios Manolakos on a flop of 6J5♠. Drake had once again paired the jack with his K♠J♣ as Manolakos was drawing with his 87. The turn and river bricked to eliminate Manolakos and leave us heads up for the title.

Jack Drake held a massive chip lead over Brett Dannevig, but that all changed around very quickly as two double ups flipped the advantage. The second double was an astonishing three-outer river after the two got their chips in on a 77♣T♣ flop with Drake’s J♠T♠ in front of Dannevig’s T8. The turn was the 5♣, leaving nearly half the deck for Drake to win the title. Even a chop would’ve been ok, but the 8♣ river was the only card Drake didn’t want to see as his world had just been turned upside down.

However Drake stuck to his task and also stuck a flop when his KT♣ got paid off on a 2♣5T flop against Dannevig’s A5♣. That put Drake back in front and he finished the job when he moved all in with A4 and Dannevig called with K9. The board ran out Q♣Q2♣55♣ and the title had been decided as Jack Drake was crowned the ANZPT Darwin champion!

Final Table Results
1st Jack Drake (Australia) – $36,480
2nd Brett Dannevig (Australia) – $24,960
3rd Fotios Manolakos (Australia) – $16,640
4th Mark Taylor (Australia) – $12,800
5th Jonathan Dangio (New Caledonia) – $10,880
6th Jamie Hill (Australia) – $8,960
7th Glenn Parry (Australia) – $7,040
8th Danny Chevalier (Australia) – $5,760
9th Aaron Benton (Australia) – $4,480

ANZPT will be back again next year so keep an eye on PokerStars for further announcements and online satellites to the first event of Season Four. Until then, the next major event on the local calendar is the Macau Poker Cup Championships which kicks off Tuesday at the Grand Lisboa Casino in Macau.

By Heath Chick
Sponsored by PokerStars.net
Photos: Kirsty Chick

LEE NELSON’S ANZPT MELBOURNE VICTORY

Posted by Editor On September - 27 - 2011 Comments Off

It was one of the most gruelling tournaments that we’ve ever seen in three seasons of the Australia New Zealand Poker Tour. A big field, talented players and very long days, not to mention the minefield of bad beats that lay in between. It was always going to prove to be a massive challenge to overcome. Three days before, we said we expected to see the cream to rise to the top in this event, and indeed that’s what happened with victory going the way of Lee Nelson.

Nelson is one of the most successful players of all time in the Australasian region. With results dating back decades, Nelson’s reputation was so solid that he picked up the nickname “Final Table” in recognition of his incredible tournament strike rate. In recent years, Nelson has reduced his playing schedule a little, but has once again proven that he still has what it takes to compete with the whiz kids as he adds an ANZPT trophy to the cabinet.

It’s a long way from the two-orbit penalty that Nelson was whacked yesterday when he acted out of turn. Like the true professional he is, Nelson maintained his composure and made it through to the final day in third chip position.

After we lost Erich Stadler (11th) and Seonglee Ang (10th) in the early stages, the scene was set for an exciting final table. However early on the play was very slow, with the short stacks waiting for the right spot and the tight players biding their time. New Zealand’s Phil Willcocks and overnight chip leader Tom Wing were pushing the action, but it was tough going.

Justin Sanchez departed in 9th place but then it took over two more hours before Brett Chalhoub was the next player to fall. Chalhoub was pretty unlucky and it was a defining hand in the tournament when his ace-king was rivered by the ace-queen of Lee Nelson. That lucky lady would jump Nelson into the chip lead while Chalhoub was sent packing in 8th place.

From there the pace of play picked up as the short stacks did their best to double up or die trying. Stephen Eliesen got caught shoving light into Phil Willcocks to fall in 7th place before overnight chip leader Tom Wing crashed and burned when he called with ace-seven only to run into a dominant ace-jack held by Willcocks. Wing was crippled and couldn’t recover to fall in 6th place.

Incredibly it was Willcocks who was next to go after a series of hands went against him.

First he doubled up Nick Georgoulas on a 9♣7♠3♠ flop when Willcocks shoved Q♣J♣ and Georgoulas made a huge call with A3 for bottom pair. Clearly rattled, Willcocks shoved all in moments later with T♣6♣ and Lee Nelson called with A♣8. Willcocks flopped a pair but Nelson ran him down with a backdoor straight to send Willcocks crashing out in 5th place just prior to the dinner break.

With hungers satisfied, the rapid eliminations continued with Karan Punjabi recovering from a short stack before eventually falling in 4th place before Danny Chevalier’s run came to an end in 3rd. Lee Nelson was the man responsible for both bustouts as he couldn’t put a foot wrong. Chevalier was looking not only for the title and cash, but valuable points in the ANZ Player of the Year race. He three-bet all in with pocket threes but Nelson made the call with ace-ten and won the race when he improved to a full house. With this result, Chevalier moves to second on the ANZ POTY and will be heading to Darwin confident of another big result.

That left us heads up with the unlikely duo of Lee Nelson and Nick Georgoulas. Nelson had the lead, but Georgoulas was quick to find a double up as the two players were prepared to play big ball and gamble for the title.

The final moment came when Nelson three-bet shoved all in with JT and Georgoulas made the call with pocket fours. Nelson flopped a flush on the 8AK flop and it was all but over. The 9 turn and 2♠ river sealed the deal as the Australian Poker Hall of Famer grabbed the title!

Final table results
1st Lee Nelson (New Zealand) – $156,550
2nd Nick Georgoulas (Australia) – $99,200
3rd Danny Chevalier (Australia) – $55,180
4th Karan Punjabi (Australia) – $43,090
5th Phil Willcocks (New Zealand) – $34,100
6th Tom Wing (Australia) (PokerStars Qualifier) – $27,900
7th Stephen Eliesen (Australia) (PokerStars Player) – $22,320
8th Brett Chalhoub (Australia) (PokerStars Qualifier) – $17,670
9th Justin Sanchez (Australia) – $13,020

By Heath Chick
Sponsored by PokerStars.net
Photo: Shannon Morris

ANZPT MELBOURNE MAIN EVENT STARTS TODAY

Posted by Editor On September - 24 - 2011 Comments Off

There’s an old saying that the cream always rises to the top. During times of intense pressure, when the game is there to be won and everything is on the line, the best will not only survive, but thrive. Tonight we find ourselves in the city of Melbourne and the heart of poker down under. However there’s something a little bit special in the air tonight, and we’re not talking about body odour.

While the Crown Poker Room is choc-a-block full of tournaments, sit & gos and cash game tables, everyone in the room only had one eye on their cards. The other was firmly fixed on one of the plethora of big screens around the room as the Australian Football League Preliminary Final had the local crowd glued to the enthralling action.

For those not familiar with our great game, tonight’s match was a battle of the titans with the irresistible force of Hawthorn pitted against the immovable object in Collingwood. It was a heads-up battle to the death that went down to the wire. 90,000-plus screaming fans filled the MCG to see Collingwood spike a two-outer river for a memorable come-from-behind victory to stay alive to reach the AFL Grand Final. It was one of the great games of all time.

Perhaps it’s a sign of things to come for us in this great city over the next few days as the PokerStars.net ANZPT Melbourne series prepares for a final of its own. The $2,200 ANZPT Melbourne Main Event is set to pitch the best poker players in the country against each other in the country’s premier poker room.

When a poker player gets off the plane and walks in the doors of the world-class Crown Casino, they know there is big money, silverware and bragging rights up for grabs. They too must rise to the challenge.

Already we’ve seen several players do exactly that, with well-known local pros grabbing wins in the preliminary events throughout the week. Luke McLean, Peter Aristidou, Trung Tran, Jai Kemp and 2009 APPT Sydney champion Aaron Benton have all risen to the top this week to claim impressive wins to add another trophy to their collection. And as this article is beamed out to the world, the $5,000 High Rollers event is heading towards an exciting conclusion. Aussie Millions third place finisher Jeff Rossiter currently leads the way, with Australian Poker Hall of Famer Billy Arygros and young guns Andy Hinrichsen and Jarred Graham still in contention.

While they duke it out, many others will now be focussing on the $2,200 ANZPT Melbourne Main Event. It’s the second-last event of Season 3, and with a big field expected, there are valuable points up for grabs to try and reel in the lead of ANZ Player of the Year leader Leo Boxell. Jesse McKenzie and Ricky Kroesen are certainly within striking distance while several others can still challenge for the top three for a share of the approx $80,000 in cash and prizes for the Player of the Year award.

ANZ Player of the Year Top Ten
1st – Leo Boxell – 244.10
2nd – Jesse McKenzie – 193.90
3rd – Ricky Kroesen – 190.78
4th – Danny Chevalier – 178.60
5th – Octavian Voegele – 162.45
6th – Charles Caris – 161.40
7th – Oliver Grujic – 150.45
8th – David Gorr – 141.95
9th – Mario Ljubicic – 141.15
10th – Grant Levy – 139.50

By Heath Chick
Sponsored by PokerStars.net

LEO BOXELL BLASTS HIS WAY TO APPT MELBOURNE TITLE

Posted by Editor On August - 4 - 2011 Comments Off

When the day started at the PokerStars.net APPT Melbourne Main Event, we knew we were in for a cracking final table. In fact, we knew that on day one when we looked around the field of 260 players and realised how stacked this field truly was. APPT champs, ANZPT winners, Aussie Millions gold rings and WSOP bracelets. Whoever would win this event was going to have to earn it.

So it’s fitting that the man to rise above them all is a man who has a decorated poker career that is the envy of most players in the Australasian region. While Leo Boxell is definitely part of poker’s old guard, his last 18 months have produced some incredibly consistent results as he continues to defy the trends of the modern game to keep the Internet whizz kids under control.

There was certainly a new school versus old school feel to this final table, as well as an intriguing Trans-Tasman rivalry between Australia and New Zealand.

In the thick of both wars was Phil Willcocks who was a dominant force throughout the final table, whether it was pounding on the blinds of Steve Bouya and Leo Boxell, or three-betting the youngsters in Jackson Zheng and Will Jones.

However it was Van Marcus who drew first blood when he doubled up with AA against the QQ♣ of Julius Colman. Unfortunately for Colman he just never got out of the blocks and when his 9♠9 ran into the K♠K♣ of Will Jones, Colman was first to the cashier in 9th place.

Will Jones and Steve Bouya were the early movers with some big cards, while Jackson Zheng and Phil Willcocks slipped down the chip count leaderboard. Zheng would be next to go when he three-bet shoved his K♣Q to find himself racing with Willcocks’ 44♣. Zheng couldn’t pair up and he was eliminated in 8th place.

The big-ball strategy of PokerStars qualifier Eddie Mascardi saw him come unstuck in 7th place when he ran his A8 into the A♠A♣ of Will Jones, while Michael Frydman’s similar game plan saw him shove his 9♠9 into Leo Boxell’s TT to bust out in 6th.

As the dinner bell tolled, it was Will Jones who held a narrow lead over the final five, but the deadlock couldn’t be broken for some time as play became tight and intense. Eventually it was Van Marcus who would be first to crack as fell just short in his quest to become the first player to win two APPT titles. Marcus committed his short stack on a QK5 flop with K♣J but a sneaky Phil Willcocks had laid the perfect trap with his AA. Willcocks improved to a flush on the turn to leave Marcus drawing dead and departing in 5th place.

Tasmania’s Will Jones was also gunning for a unique double as he was seeking his second trophy of the week after being part of the successful Tasmanian State of Origin team earlier in the series. He may have picked up the nickname “Willy Lowball” in that event for his Razz prowess, but he proved that No Limit Holdem is his true calling with a strong showing on this final table. In fact, he was unlucky to be eliminated in 4th place in one of the key hands on the final table.

The action flop was 9♠K5♠ as Willcocks let out for 175,000. Steve Bouya folded but Jones raised it to 425,000 before Willcocks moved all in. Jones insta-called with 99 for a set but Willcocks was far from gone with his 7♠6♠ combo draw. Willcocks made his straight on 8 and rubbed salt into the wound with the 3♠ river.

It was the difference between elimination and a monster chip lead as Willcocks set out to pound on his last two foes. He was the most aggressive player, but he was left as merely a bystander when Steve Bouya shoved all in with 99♠ on a J52♣ flop. It backfired when Boxell called and opened A♠A♣ as the turn and river bricked out.

Bouya had to be content with 3rd place as Boxell nabbed the chip lead entering heads-up play. From there it was a titanic two-hour struggle where both players had chances to win it all.

After shoving all in preflop on the very first hand of heads-up play, Boxell continued to swing wildly. He regretted this approach when he shoved his 22 into the Q♠Q of Willcocks to give the Kiwi a big double up, but he quickly recovered after making a backdoor flush to trump Willcocks’ top pair.

Boxell had a chance at the title with a coinflip holding ace-king against pocket jacks but the bare board gave Willcocks another double up before it was Willcocks’ turn to sweat the trophy. The 6♠5♣7 flop saw Boxell call it off with 63♠ for a pair and straight draw against Willcocks’ K♠K. Boxell spiked the 4 on the turn for a straight to leave Willcocks a dejected man.

Willcocks slid backwards from there until he made his final stand with a triple barrel on a board of 2Q♠64♠J. Boxell deliberated before calling with 4♣2♠ for two pair which was too good for Willcocks’J♠T.

The rail gave Boxell a tremendous round of applause as everyone respected the incredible achievement of the future Australian Poker Hall of Famer. While the APPT trophy is his, he also grabs $330,000 in prize money and the lead in the ANZ Player of the Year race. Congratulations Leo!

Final Table Results

1st Leo Boxell (Australia) – $330,000
2nd Phil Willcocks (New Zealand) – $207,600
3rd Steve Bouya (Australia) – $116,000
4th Will Jones (Australia) – $88,600
5th Van Marcus (Australia) – $73,300
6th Michael Frydman (Australia) – $58,000
7th Eddie Mascardi (Australia) (PokerStars Qualifier) – $45,800
8th Jackson Zheng (New Zealand) (PokerStars Qualifier) – $36,700
9th Julius Colman (Australia) – $27,500

The next event on the local calendar is the APPT Snowfest event in Queenstown, New Zealand which kicks off August 23rd. This is one you won’t want to miss, so make sure you qualify now on PokerStars!

By Heath Chick