The record breaking WPT Prime Cambodia may be in the history books but the confetti continues to fly with winners yet to be celebrated and moments to relive. Running from August 11 to 23 at NagaWorld Phnom Penh, players gathered from around the world to create the biggest event in Asia of 4,309 entries and a festival prize pool over $2.9 Million.
The final day witnessed Mike Takayama emerge as the first player to capture two events, Main Event champion David Erquiaga was hailed WPT Player of the Festival, and India walked away with two more trophies for a whopping 8 in total. We’ve got those stories, festival highlights, and final side events winners for you.
Festival review
Grand prize pool: US$ 2,951,395 (24 events)
Entries: 4,309
Main Event champion: David Erquiaga
Player of the Festival: David Erquiaga
Multi-winner: Mike Takayama – 10K SHR Single Day Challenge & $HR 3K
Biggest earner: Mike Takayama – US$ 200,100
Most final tables: Kunal Patni (4) Jasven Saigal (4)
Trophies by flag: India (8), Philippines (3), Malaysia (3), Vietnam (2), Russia (1), Korea (1), South Africa (1), United Kingdom (1), Indonesia (1), Netherlands (1), USA (1), Taiwan (1)
Philippines’ David Erquiaga hailed WPT Player of the Festival
Philippines’ David Erquiaga was supposed to fly home after winning the Main Event but postponed it in an attempt to secure his lead in the WPT Player of the Festival race. With three events yet to complete on closing day, Erquiaga wasn’t safe with only 100 points ahead of Kunal Patni. Five others down the rung were also in contention, Trong Hieu Ngo, Mike Takayama, Martijn Gerrits, Christopher Mateo, and WPT Prime Vietnam Player of the Festival winner Duy Ho. WPT Live Events Specialist, Danny McDonagh, documented the tight race in his Facebook page:
The Player of the Festival for WPT Prime Cambodia went literally right down to the wire! I was fortunate to have a front seat to watch the action. Coming into the final three events the top 7 were live.
Christopher Mateo was actually on 375 points and a 2nd in the SuperStack Classic moved him up to 675 points. He declined to play the Turbo Closer given his flight that night and Mike Takayama also passed on the last two events for the same reason.
However, the other 5 in the top 7 all played Event 23, the $300 6 Max. Both Kunal and Martijn Gerrits busted and jumped into the Turbo Closer but both ultimately fell short in that event also.
That left the start of day leader David Erquiaga with 900 points, Trong Hieu Ngo on 825 points and Duy Ho on 650 points to fight for the trophy and 5K Main Tour entry in the 6 Max. The winner would receive 300 points, going down to 50 points for 9th.
All three were live with 11 remaining and David was seriously short stacked down to 53k. And then in the matter of three hands this happened.
David went all in a slight underdog and doubled up. Next hand on same table Duy Ho was all in with Aces against a shove of 6’s for a 500k plus pot only to see a 6 fall on the flop and eliminate him in 11th.
And on the other table just after Duy busted Hieu Ngo was all in and busted in 10th to guarantee David the POF win.
Erquiaga earned 800 points for his Main Event victory and 150 points for 6th place at the $5.3K Super High Roller for a combined 950 points. With the most points accrued, he won the WPT Passport worth $5,000 to any WPT Main Tour of choice.
Record breaking Main Event
The WPT Prime Cambodia broke bounds with a record breaking 1,050 Main Event entries for a prize pool of US$ 1,018,500. This was the largest turnout and pot for an open event by the brand in Asia.
Emerging triumphant was Philippine pro David Erquiaga for his first ever major title. In addition to a career high payout of US$ 137,008, Erquiaga won a seat worth US$ 10,400 to the WPT World Championship $15M guaranteed. The event takes place in December at the Wynn Las Vegas.
David Erquiaga clinches the record breaking WPT Prime Cambodia Main Event
Philippines’ Mike Takayama captures second high roller title, closes as biggest earner
Highly decorated Filipino pro Mike Takayama impressed at the festival, becoming the only player to bag two events. Takayama‘s first win was at the 10K Super High Roller Single Day Challenge for a substantial US$ 94,100 payout, then on penultimate day, he outlasted the 140 entry field of the High Roller 3K event for a larger US$ 106,000 paycheck. With a combined US$ 200,100 in winnings, he was also the festival’s biggest earner.
The HR 3K event was a two-day affair, and being that it was the last high roller event scheduled, it drew a 140 entry field for a bulky US$ 380,240 prize pool. Among the players in attendance were Tzai Wei Phua, Cao Ngoc Anh, GACKT, James Mendoza, Punnat Punsri to mention a few. Day 1 closed with Philippines’ Alfie Poetra leading the hunt while Takayama was ranked 8th. Also in the top 10 lineup were WSOP champion Leo Soma, France’s Clement Van Driessche, Russia’s Vladimir Mefodichev, and Filipino Vamerdino Magsakay.
At seven-handed, Takayama amassed a monstrous stack after delivering a double elimination with a nutty nut flush
against Magsakay‘s and Mefodichev’s on a board . From there he cruised to heads up backed by a massive lead against Dutch pro Martijn Gerrits. Both players were seeking their second festival title with Gerrits having won the Short Deck High Roller. Despite Takayama‘s big lead, it wasn’t an easy close. Gerrits battled to steal the lead. Once Takayama grabbed it back, he nailed it shut with pocket Tens over King-Five.
Buy in: US$ 3,000
Entries: 140
Prize pool: US$ 380,240
ITM: 18 places
1st | Mike Takayama | Philippines | $106,000 |
2nd | Martijn Gerrits | Netherlands | $66,900 |
3rd | Sangbeom Lim | Korea | $39,700 |
4th | Clement Van Driessche | France | $23,800 |
5th | Phachara Wongwichit | Thailand | $18,500 |
6th | Vladimir Mefodichev | Russia | $15,590 |
7th | Vamerdino Magsakay | Philippines | $13,400 |
8th | Somashek Kurkhepally | India | $12,000 |
9th | Koen Breed | Netherlands | $10,600 |
10th | Punnat Punsri | Thailand | $9,250 |
11th | Alfie Poetra | Philippines | $9,250 |
12th | Abhinav Iyer | India | $9,250 |
13th | Mei San Ang | Singapore | $8,000 |
14th | Fuwei Chen | China | $8,000 |
15th | Gavin Best | Australia | $8,000 |
16th | Zarvan Tumboli | India | $8,000 |
17th | Kyungtae Lee | Korea | $7,000 |
18th | Viet Hoang Tran | Vietnam | $7,000 |
Kunal Patni and Jasven Saigal reach four final tables
While several players reached multiple final tables, Indian players Kunal Patni and Jasven Saigal topped the counts with four each. Both players also won one event. Here’s a look at their achievements:
Kunal Patni
3rd place – Event 3: Deepstack NLH Freezeout
1st place – Event 5: Deepstack NLH
5th place – Event 7: Mystery Bounty
6th place – Main Event
Jasven Saigal
6th place – Event 7: Mystery Bounty
7th place – Event 11: Bounty Event $250 Bounty
8th place – Event 16: Pot Limit Omaha
1st place – Event 23: SuperStack 6-Max Finale
WPT World Championship package winner: DINH QUOC NGUYEN
Vietnam’s Dinh Quoc Nguyen won a package worth US$ 12,500 to the WPT World Championship after outlasting seven other runners at the WPT WC Satellite.
India lifts eight trophies
Throughout the 13-day festival, players from all over the globe were in participation. Coming in packs were players from Taiwan, Thailand, Korea, Philippines, Vietnam, Singapore, Australia, South Africa, France, and India who lifted 8 trophies, the most by any nation.
Winners: Ashish Munot (NagaWorld SuperStack), Kunal Patni (Deepstack NLH), Akshay Kapoor (NLH Single Day), Zarvan Tumboli (Pot Limit Omaha), Shardul Parthasarathi (SHR), Somashekar Kurkhepally (Bounty Event), Jasven Saigal (SuperStack 6-Max Finale), and Gurpal Singh (Closer Turbo).
Final side event winners
Event 18: NLH Freezeout – DUY MANH HO – US$ 6,460
Buy in: US$ 300
Entries: 119
Prize pool: US$ 31,166
ITM: 15 places
1st | Duy Manh Ho | USA | $6,460* |
2nd | Anton Widjaya | Indonesia | $5,711* |
3rd | Chi Chung Ho | Hong Kong | $6,110* |
4th | Abbouchi Mohamad | Lebanon | $2,182 |
5th | Suk Sun Noh | Korea | $1,652 |
6th | Po Chun Wen | Taiwan | $1,371 |
7th | Jin Xiong Lee | Singapore | $1,184 |
8th | Tomas Dedinas | USA | $1,044 |
9th | Raju Jaruplavath | India | $919 |
10th | Bruce Richard Kelly | Australia | $810 |
11th | Kittipat Poochaneeyangkoon | Thailand | $810 |
12th | Robert Campbell | Australia | $810 |
13th | Lindsay Charles Jefferson | Australia | $701 |
14th | Kamran Suriya | Pakistan | $701 |
15th | Harsh Bubna | India | $701 |
*Three-way deal
Event 19: NLH Turbo Freezeout – VICTOR CHONG – US$ 8,000
Buy in: US$ 300
Entries: 115
Prize pool: US$ 30,119
ITM: 15 places
1st | Victor Chong | Malaysia | $8,000* |
2nd | Duy Manh Ho | USA | $6,382* |
3rd | Gunisha Sinha | India | $3,283 |
4th | Samuel Adams | New Zealand | $2,108 |
5th | Ari Marlon Kumpumaki | Finland | $1,596 |
6th | Raju Jaruplavath | India | $1,325 |
7th | Prommin Talordpong | Thailand | $1,145 |
8th | Tanik Kongjaroentin | Thailand | $1,009 |
9th | Chung Yu Ho | Taiwan | $888 |
10th | Chang Yu Lee | Taiwan | $783 |
11th | Omair Javed | Pakistan | $783 |
12th | Laksh Pal Singh | India | $783 |
13th | Kanchan Sharma | India | $678 |
14th | Muhammed Ali Chandna | Pakistan | $678 |
15th | Eunju Jung | Korea | $678 |
*Heads up deal
Event 20: Bounty Event $150 Bounty – VAN TRUNG NGUYEN – US$ 12,100
Buy in: US$ 500
Entries: 194
Prize pool: US$ 84,681
Bounty pool: US$ 29,100
ITM: 25 places
1st | Van Trung Nguyen | Vietnam | $12,100* |
2nd | Duc Kien Tran | Vietnam | $11,264* |
3rd | Trent Fechter | USA | $5,697 |
4th | Klas Stafan Borjesson | $3,465 | |
5th | Hua Wei Lin | Taiwan | $2,676 |
6th | Junxiang Collin Lim | Singapore | $2,218 |
7th | Constantine Paparestis | Ireland | $1,890 |
8th | Mohamad Bin Noording | Singapore | $1,634 |
9th | Ari Marlon Kumpumaki | Finland | $1,383 |
10th | Kyoungwon Park | Korea | $1,203 |
11th | Hiroki Karatsu | Japan | $1,203 |
12th | Hiroki Morishita | Japan | $1,203 |
13th | Ankit Wadhawan | India | $1,028 |
14th | Van Canh Nguyen | Vietnam | $1,028 |
15th | Phuong Ngoc Nguyen | Vietnam | $1,028 |
16th | Ying Chang Chen | Taiwan | $853 |
17th | Chyuan Seng Wee | Malaysia | $853 |
18th | Jain Bhuvan | Singapore | $853 |
19th | Kenichi Seto | Japan | $681 |
20th | Jun Hao Wu | Singapore | $681 |
21st | Guoxi Lian | Singapore | $681 |
22nd | Sunho Yoo | Korea | $514 |
23rd | Thai Bao Vu | Vietnam | $514 |
24th | Chun Hsiang Yang | Taiwan | $514 |
25th | Pratibh Saluja | India | $417 |
*Heads up deal
Event 22: SuperStack Classic Freezeout – CHAO TING CHENG – US$ 14,271
Buy in: US$ 400
Entries: 148
Prize pool: US$ 51,682
ITM: 19 places
1st | Chao Ting Cheng | Taiwan | $14,271 |
2nd | Christopher Mateo | Philippines | $9,044 |
3rd | Ngoc Quoc Bao Pham | Vietnam | $5,323 |
4th | Sinsung Yoon | Korea | $3,232 |
5th | Anton Widjaya | Indonesia | $2,507 |
6th | Kohei Wada | Japan | $2,070 |
7th | Jun Hao Wu | Singapore | $1,809 |
8th | Dzmitry Halubitski | Belarus | $1,615 |
9th | David Peter Rodwell | Australia | $1,427 |
10th | Ben Abrahams | Thailand | $1,240 |
11th | Minjae Bae | Korea | $1,240 |
12th | Yoke Wei Woon | Malaysia | $1,240 |
13th | Samuel Adams | New Zealand | $1,059 |
14th | Jianguo Zhou | China | $1,059 |
15th | Shardul Parthasarathi | India | $1,059 |
16th | Rindra Norodom | $904 | |
17th | Ngoc Quoc Luat Tran | Vietnam | $904 |
18th | Julius Umbrazuinas | Lithuania | $904 |
19th | Alfonso Baja | Philippines | $775 |
Event 23: SuperStack 6-Max Finale – JASVEN SAIGAL – US$ 6,255
Buy in: US$ 300
Entries: 90
Prize pool: US$ 23,571
ITM: 12 places
1st | Jasven Saigal | India | $6,255* |
2nd | Rindra Norodom | $5,700* | |
3rd | Sylvain Chhang | $2,829 | |
4th | Amit Kaushik | India | $1,827 |
5th | Laksh Pal Singh | India | $1,414 |
6th | Kun Kiet Wong | Malaysia | $1,120 |
7th | Wongyu Kang | Korea | $943 |
8th | Huaxin Wang | China | $825 |
9th | David Jansen Erquiaga | Philippines | $748 |
10th | Duy Manh Ho | USA | $684 |
11th | Trong Hieu Ngo | Vietnam | $636 |
12th | Sombath Sok | $590 |
*Heads up deal
Event 24: Closer Turbo – GURPAL SINGH NANDA – US$ 11,713
Buy in: US$ 550
Entries: 69
Prize pool: US$ 33,465
ITM: 9 places
1st | Gurpal Singh Nanda | India | $6,255 |
2nd | Ankit Wadhawan | India | $5,700 |
3rd | Chung Yi Ho | Taiwan | $2,829 |
4th | Jeffry Kurniawan | Indonesia | $1,827 |
5th | Ashish Munot | India | $1,414 |
6th | Dhanesh Chainani | Singapore | $1,120 |
7th | Sumit Sapra | India | $943 |
8th | Kim Lay Ly | Canada | $825 |
9th | Kevin Sabbe | Australia | $748 |
Up next is WPT Australia
For the first time, the World Poker Tour will bring its main tour to Australia with games taking place from September 15 to 27 at The Star Gold Coast. The festival features a full schedule of 13 events with buy ins from A$ 440 to A$ 10,000. The highlight is the A$ 5,400 Main Event which runs from September 23 to 27. Two starting days are available to join the action. With the past WPT festivals drawing massive crowds, players can expect this event to surpass all others. Head to the WPT website for all the info.