The 2014 Asia Championship of Poker starts on October 24 on the 'PokerStars LIVE at City of Dreams' poker site in Macau. All poker players on this a part of the sector are beginning to focus their thoughts on it, and in reality players from all over the world are besides. It's expected to be a large series with some huge fields.
This would be the third year for the ACOP, which features what's probably some of the biggest buy-in Main Events within the world, and positively across the Asia Pacific region. The buy-in is HK$ 100,000, that's the equivalent of about $13,000 USD. Together with the Aussie Millions, everyone looks forward to the ACOP all year as a potential chance to bink something really big.
I know a large number of pros are coming to Macau this year for the ACOP, including Jonathan Duhamel, Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier, Randy "nanonoko" Lew, Terrence Chan, Mike McDonald, and numerous others. It's definitely a sequence that has a tendency to draw numerous international pros, not only for the primary Event but for the HK$ 250,000 High Roller and a HK$ 500,000 Super High Roller (with two rebuys) as well.
Right now there's some added intrigue surrounding the ACOP on account of all of the speak about everyone racing to become the primary player to win two "Spadies." Players who win an ACOP event -- any of the numbered ones -- receive a ravishing trophy that earned the nickname after there has been a contest to call it last year.
In the history of the ACOP, many players have won one Spadie, but no person has yet won two. So in this day and age there is a lot of discuss who gets the second.
Out of the Team Pros, Raymond Wu and i've each won one Spadie. I won mine on the very end of last year's ACOP within the HK$ 8,800 NLH event, and the memory of that finish is making me stay up for this year's ACOP even more.
Actually I COULD have a slight advantage to win a second one first because one is awarded to the winner of the women Event, although I MIGHT really wish to win an open event if I'LL choose.
The ACOP schedule is 17 days long and it is a real test of skill and mental will to endure the entire schedule. By the last weekend you will see numerous players exhausted and that incorporates myself. In fact, last year on Day 1 of the HK$ 8,800 NLH event I USED TO BE literally still in bed at 7 p.m. when the tournament started! I'd played on a daily basis up until then and hadn't really seen any fruits of my labor, and that i was so tired I nearly skipped it.
But I DISCOVERED the motivation, pulled myself away from bed and jumped into the tournament a few half-hour after it started. I USED TO BE the chip leader after Day 1, maintained my lead throughout Day 2, then got to heads-up against my friend Ted Wang and after three or four hours I took it down.
It was an unexpected to win -- especially when I almost didn't even play the development -- but everything just fell into place. Perhaps because I DID NOT have numerous expectations, I DID NOT put an excessive amount of pressure on myself and thus performed better. After all the experience proved how important it may be to not surrender and to maintain persevering.
It's still fresh in my thoughts because the ACOP comes back around.
Some people have suggested skipping the primary week in order that they stay fresh on the end. But you never know which event is the only you are going to go deep and win. Volume is so important and so my focus is to arrange for the grueling schedule and stay mentally fit so I WILL BE ABLE TO remain positive irrespective of results and the way many days in a row I've played.
I'm really motivated now to win a second. If I were to bet on it, I'D wager that somebody"" may be picking up a second this time.
And why not me!
Read More... [Source: PokerStarsBlog.com :: PokerStars Macau]
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