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Terry Fan Poker

Terry Fan Poker Rating: 3,9/5 7148 reviews
  1. Terry Fan Poker Games
  2. Terry Fan Wsop
  1. Terry Fan (Photo Antonio Abrego) 5. What are your goals as poker player for the next few years? My goal as poker player for the next few years is to improve to my ability and promote the game to the world. I would love some opportunities to share with the world how poker can change one's life in a good way.
  2. Terry Fan Flush with chips, Jae Wook Shin opened the action with an under-the-gun raise to 40,000 and Terry Fan moved all-in for around 220,000 (11 big blinds), with Shin making the call.
  3. For all the poker fans and enthuse it's, me and the famous Daniel Negreanu made a greeting video to say hi to everyone in Taiwan all the way from WSOP. #wsop #5k6max 范雲翔 Terry Fan.
Terry fan wsop
Donnie Peters

Several notable names were eliminated in the run up to the final table, with Terry Fan taking 39th, Stephen Chidwick finishing 34th, Alex Lee 28th, and former big stack, James Obst, busting in 11th. Asian pro KC Wong fell painfully short of the final table, in 8th place.

After the entire Macau Poker Cup festival kicked off the opening of the new PokerStars LIVE Macau at the City of Dreams with a bang, the series has now come to a close with the completion of the Red Dragon Main Event. Emerging victorious over the record 891-player field was 30-year-old Taiwanese poker professional Terry Fan. For the victory, Fan earned HK$1,771,000 (approx. $230,000).

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (HK$)
1Terry FanChinese Taipei$1,771,000
2Gie ReyesPhilippines$1,242,000
3Neil ChenChinese Taipei$743,000
4Fei XieChina$555,000
5Andy AsihwardjiCanada$393,000
6Fanny LiUSA$328,000
7Sailesh LohiaIndia$262,000
8Wesley ZhuChina$196,000
9Ryan YuCanada$153,000

With three Day 1s for the HK$11,000 buy-in event, expectations were high on surpassing the 635-player record for a poker tournament in Asia. Thanks to 209 players on Day 1a, 288 entrants on Day 1b and then another 394 players on Day 1c, the field topped the scales at a whopping 891 entrants, generating a prize pool of HK$8,746,412 (approx. $1,100,000) and setting the tournament record in Asia.

Terry Fan Poker Games

After Day 1a, Sailesh Lohia led the field. Zhen Wu Wang topped Day 1b's field, but Lohia maintained the overall lead. On Day 1c, Gie Reyes snatched the overall top spot and led heading into Day 2 with 232 players remaining.

With the top 108 places set to earn a cash in the event, someone had to go home as bubble boy, and finishing in 109th place was China's Hui Zhang.

According to the PokerStars Blog, Zhang was all in with the against Hisashi Ogi's . Despite being ahead, Zhang couldn't fade the danger of an ace that hit the flop and eventually sent him to the rail on the bubble.

From there, the eliminations began to rack up, including Jim Collopy (98th - HK$17,500), Team PokerStars Pro Vivian Im (82nd - HK$21,900), Nick Wong (56th - HK$26,300), Jordan Westmorland (44th - HK$30,700), Tommy Le (23rd - HK$43,700) and Kenny Wong (21st - HK$52,500). After Day 2 was complete, just 18 players remained with Fanny Li leading the way.

On Day 3, notables Billy 'The Croc' Argyros finished in 18th place (HK$61,200) and Vincent Rubianes finished in 11th place (HK$91,800). The final table was set shortly thereafter.

Fan

Fan held the chip lead to begin the final table, and eventually worked his way down to heads-up play against Reyes with roughly a 2-to-1 chip lead. On the final hand, Reyes was all in with the versus the for Fan. The flop came down and gave Reyes the lead. The turn brought the to keep him in front, but the on the river was just what Fan needed.

While Reyes took home HK$1,242,000 for his runner-up finish, it was Fan who earned the title and a whopping HK$1,771,000.

Winner photo courtesy of Kenneth Lim from the PokerStars Blog.

For more videos like this about your favorite poker professionals, check out the PokerNews Video page.

okay..so here's the couple of updates for the entire package so far:
1. I missed three 560s for the DSE and decided to play the last wsop event before the main which was the $2500 (so..I put up some of my own money along with 560*3).
Poker$2500 event: was pretty happy about my first table. Shannon Elizabeth was on my table, along with 4 nits and 2 fish. It didn't take a long time before I doubled up my stack with QJs on KT569 board against AK who crai the river. Built my stack up to 21k before the dinner break, was playing well, got some cards. After the dinner break, my luck totally turned around and was running horribly bad. Had JJ and lost to a fish's 24dd on 662A2 board. Then I had A9cc from co vs SB fish's A7 on A7554 board (I checked back flop and pot controlled well).
FanFew orbits later, I busted Shannon with KK against her AQ aipf. Too bad I didn't get a 'I knocked out Carbon poker pro' tshirt from her, nor did I get a hand shake or smile from her.
So my stack after the dinner break has been fluctuating up and down...Then I proceed to lost AK vs AT aipf again..and was down to below 10k in chips. just couple mins before the blind went up to 4/8, I decided to take my chance and shove 6k utg w/ Q9o (bad shove but i dont' want to let blinds increase and hit me in the bb and become super short). Got called in two spots, AJo and AKhh. 9 ball on the turn and I trippled up. yay! finally run good once! So I ended day 1 with 17.5k.
Day2:
blind started at 400/800/100, I lost ATs vs AQo for 7bb aipf pot and again became a short stack. Got moved to a new table and open shoved two hands in a row, no calls. the busting hand: had 12k utg at 400/800/100, looked down 88, obv the easiest ship in the world, too bad wasn't good enough against utg+1's AA. gg me.

Terry Fan Wsop

$5K 6max tournament report:
I have to admit, this is by far the toughest tournament field I've ever played in my entire life. I think it's also good and bad for me. Good thing is that it makes me play my A++++ game and concentrate 200%, bad thing is that I know they are not gonna make my life easy.
So here we go, some notable hands I can recall.
guy two to my right is the famous Shane Schlager, guy to my right is gp333 is I remember it correctly, guy to my left is mattg1983 who also won the 5k plo last year?
So anyway, I was lucky enough to get some good cards and got paid off early and built my stack to 23k ish when this hand happened: Shane open from the button, I flat in the bb with 66, flop came down 356, check/check, turn 8, i led and he calls, river was another 8, i check, he vbets, i c/r to 4800ish and he tank calls with his trip 8s. The very next hand, he opens from the hj, i flat in the sb with 33, mattg calls. flop 3T8 two clubs, this time, I decided to lead out (different line with set, to confuse ppl), mattg folds and shane raises. I thought for a little and jams and shane snaps with his oesd. turn boated me up and shane hit the rail.
Then gp333 started to become quite active and I wasn't ready to let him get an easy life. We played multiple pots against each other, I won most of them and busted him at the end.
just the hand before the 1st break (or 2nd..i don't remember), he opens from the co as he has been doing, I 3bet otb with Q8o, he calls obv, he hates to fold to 3bet. flop came down KJX, he check/calls my cbet, turn was 7 I think, he check/calls again, river was another brick, he check and folds to my 3rd barrel and says nice hand to me. phew...
two hands before I bust him: it was bvb situation, folds to him in the sb, he opens as he has been doing all the time to my big blind, I defend with 9To, flop K78, he cbets, I call, turn 8, he bets, I call, river 5, he checks, I bet a 1/3 pot and he instant mucks.
Hand I busted him: he opens utg, I flat with AJo, everyone folds, flop A low low, he check/calls my bet as a pfr, turn was another low card, he c/c again, river was a J, he check/tanks/calls my river shove and he hit the rail.
Up to this point, I have to say that I was playing my A++ game and was super confident.
Then I proceed to lose two big pots. One was where I limp sb with T7o, mattg checks behind, flop J37ss, I led, he raises, and I call. turn was a Q, I check/call again, river was an offsuit Ace, I check and he shoves for 8k, I tank and went through the whole hand and I knew that Ace is almost in his range, nor does he have anything decent, and both Q and A are good scary cards for him to get me off my weak pair hand. So I was thinking, this is either a flopped two pair hand, or a completely air. I called and he showed Q4o lol.
Then I lost another big pot against an unknown button who has been raising my bb pretty often. He opens btn, i 3bet with A7o from bb, he tanks and 4bets, I instant ship it in, too bad I ran into his QQ and failed to improve.
AFter the dinner break, David Singer was on my table and this busto hand happened:
he opens co, I 3bet from sb with AsQh. he calls. flop KsQsJ, I check, David cbets 7kish, I c/r over 60% of my stack and he tanks tanks tanks and decides to shove. I snap and he turns over TsJh. I was in a very good shape against his 6 outers. turn was a J and GG me. Well played David, that's all I can say about you.
All in all, of all the events I played, the only one I played bad was the 1600 at the venetian, everything else I was def playing well or even my A plus game. Now, I'm just looking forward to the ME and hopefully the luck can be on my side this time