
Final Day
Akira Takasugi Crowned Champion of the Largest and Richest APT Main Event in History

The 2025 APT Taipei Main Event has come to a dramatic close inside the Red Space venue in Taipei, Taiwan, as Japan's Akira Takasugi cemented his name into the history books by conquering the largest and richest APT Main Event ever held in the tour’s 19-year history.
Takasugi outlasted a record-shattering field of 2,547 entries, collecting the lion’s share of the massive TWD 121,033,440 (~$3.7 million) prize pool, along with an APT Championship Main Event seat valued at TWD 350,000. For his efforts, the Japanese pro earned a life-changing TWD 19,009,440 (~$586,710) and the glory of lifting the most sought-after trophy on the APT calendar.
The final table was packed with storylines — from comebacks, coolers, and cracked aces, to relentless aggression and a clinical closing out display from Takasugi. After a seven-hour rollercoaster, it was Takasugi who proved to be the best, defeating Iat Man Leong heads-up to claim the title and secure the most prestigious victory of his career.
2025 APT Taipei Main Event Final Table Results
Place | Player | Prize (USD) |
---|---|---|
1 | AT Akira Takasugi | $586,710 |
2 | IM Iat Man Leong | $312,745 |
3 | JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | $211,945 |
4 | SK Shinichiro Kano | $163,350 |
5 | NK Nishant Kumar | $136,405 |
6 | KS Kiwanont Sukhum | $110,000 |
7 | RK Rintaro Kagawa | $83,995 |
8 | OC Owen Chong | $60,770 |
9 | DT Dang Thi Hue | $46,295 |
*Plus an APTC Main Event Seat worth TWD 350,000
Final Table Action
The final table started off rather slow, as expected, with everyone playing snug and hoping to ladder up the pay jumps. But after about 40 minutes of nerve-racking poker, Rintaro Kagawa put Leong virtually all in on the river. Leong eventually called with a rivered boat and was thrilled to see he got there against Kagawa's turned Broadway straight. That pot catapulted Leong into the chip lead and left Kagawa near the bottom of the counts.
An hour later, the only female player and only former APT Main Event champion left in the field was out in ninth for TWD 1,500,000 (~USD 46,300). Dang Thi Hue got the majority of her short stack in preflop with ace-ten, then committed the rest on the flop with second pair. Kagawa had outflopped her with a pair of queens holding king-queen, and no help from the dealer meant the end of Hue’s run.

Now Kiwanont Sukhum of Thailand occupied the bottom spot, but that quickly changed when his pocket tens held in a flip against Nishant Kumar's Big Slick — and suddenly Kumar was the one on life support.
When the blinds crept up, Wayne Lam kept the pressure on, steadily chipping up while the rest of the finalists jostled for position. Kumar nearly tripled his stack when he jammed his three big blinds over an open with pocket fives. Owen Chong over-jammed behind with ace-queen to isolate, but the safe runout kept Kumar alive — and put Chong into the danger zone.

Next to hit the rail was Chong — and in brutal fashion. He shoved ace-four of hearts and was called by Kano Shinichiro, who had the same hand in clubs. A chop looked almost guaranteed, but a three-club flop left Chong drawing dead, with just a bad beat story and TWD 1,969,000 (~USD 60,770) for his eighth-place finish.
Still unable to recover from the early cooler, Kagawa was out next in seventh for TWD 2,721,500 (~USD 84,000). His ace-queen couldn’t improve despite flopping a flush draw versus Shinichiro’s pocket nines.
Yet again, Sukhum found himself as the short stack — a spot he’s clearly studied well. He survived an all-in against Lam when his ace-queen made two pair versus Takasugi’s queen-jack.

But the very next hand, Sukhum called off his twelve big blinds from the big blind after Takasugi shoved from the small. Sukhum's queen-ten was dominated by king-ten, and this time Sukhum couldn’t pull off another escape. He was out in sixth, banking TWD 3,564,000 (~USD 110,000).
Kumar had shown he wasn’t afraid to get aggressive, but after losing a flip earlier, he was forced to tighten up. Still, he doubled up to ten big blinds with ace-five against Leong’s king-ten. Just a few hands later, he jammed over Leong’s open with ace-seven of spades — only for Shinichiro to wake up with pocket aces in the blinds.
Shinichiro looked comfortable — that is, until two spades came on the flop. The turn was clean, but a rivered spade gave Kumar life and sent his rail into a frenzy.

With five players left, the stacks evened out. It felt like whoever made the move to take control would end up lifting the trophy. Takasugi showed no fear — raising and barreling relentlessly to take the chip lead, a spot he wouldn’t give up again.
The stalemate finally broke when Leong jammed queen-jack from the small blind and Kumar — maybe feeling invincible after cracking aces — called off with slightly fewer chips holding pocket fives. A jack on the flop sealed Kumar’s fate. He bowed out in fifth for TWD 4,419,500 (~USD 136,400).
With APT Championship tickets worth TWD 350,000 up for grabs for a podium finish, the jump from fourth to third meant more than just money. Takasugi knew this, and he leaned on the pressure, building up to half the chips in play.

His aggressive play paid off again when he rivered a flush against Shinichiro’s trips, leaving the Japanese player with under ten bigs. Shinichiro moved all in shortly after with ace-nine, but ran into Takasugi’s pocket queens. No help came, and Shinichiro was out in fourth for TWD 5,292,500 (~USD 163,350).
Down to three, Leong and Lam were virtually tied behind Takasugi’s mountain of chips. Lam was next to fall, and in a particularly nasty way.
Takasugi opened the button — as he had been doing nonstop — and Lam jammed two sevens from the small blind. Leong woke up with pocket queens and had a chance to take the tournament heads-up. A seven in the window gave Lam a glimmer of hope, but a queen followed right behind it, giving both players a set. No miracle came, and Lam had to settle for third and TWD 6,867,000 (~USD 211,950).

Heads-up began with Takasugi holding a 2:1 chip lead, which he quickly stretched to 4:1 thanks to relentless aggression — and a little run-good.
Eventually, Leong found a double with ace-ten against Takasugi’s queen-ten to narrow the gap, but it didn’t shift the momentum. Takasugi just went right back to grinding, slowly bleeding Leong down to ten big blinds.

In the final hand, Takasugi jammed king-six, and Leong made his stand with queen-deuce suited. Both flopped a pair, but Takasugi held the lead, and the river bricked out. Just like that, Takasugi was crowned APT Taipei 2025 Main Event Champion.
He shook hands with Leong — who earned TWD 10,133,000 (~USD 312,750) for his incredible runner-up finish — before sprinting to his rail to explode in celebration.
When asked by the APT announcer if he had anything to say to the world watching him win the Main Event, Takasugi kept it simple:
“I am the best.”
What a champion!

In a tournament filled with twists, talent, and tension, it was Takasugi who had the final say — etching his name into APT history as the champion of its biggest Main Event ever.
Rintaro Kagawa Has Been Eliminated in 7th Place for TWD 2,721,500 (~USD 84,000)

Hand 69 Rintaro Kagawa shoved all in for 5,600,000 from early position and his countrymate Shinichiro Kano called on the button.
Rintaro Kagawa: A♣ Q♦
Shinichiro Kano: 9♠ 9♣
A flop came 7♦ 5♦ 3♦ , offering Kagawa a flush draw. However, a runout rolled off 3♠ 2♣ , ending Kagawa't tournament run in seventh place for a payday of TWD 2,721,500 (~USD 84,000)

Player | Chips |
---|---|
SK Shinichiro Kano | 19,000,000(32 BB) |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | busted |
Leong's River Bet Gets Answer

Hand 68 Rintaro Kagawa raised the hijack to 1,200,000 with A♥ K♦ and Iat Man Leong called form the big blind with A♣ 2♣ .
On the flop of 4♥ 9♦ 6♣ , it went check-check. The 2 hit on the turn, where Leong checked to Kagawa, who bet 1,000,000. Leong called.
When the river showed a board-pairing 4♣ , Leong bet 2,500,000 and Kagawa called after tanking for a long time. Leong dragged in the pot.
Player | Chips |
---|---|
IM Iat Man Leong | 21,225,000(35 BB) |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 5,500,000(9 BB) |
Lam Flops A Jack to Collect the Pot

Hand 44 Kiwanont Sukhum raised the cutoff to 1,000,000 with A♥ Q♠ and won the pot.
Hand 45 Wayne Lam opened the cutoff to 1,000,000 with A♥ 8♦ and won the pot.
Hand 46 Rintaro Kagawa raised to 1,000,000 with A♥ Q♣ from early position and Wayne Lam called from the hijack with A♥ J♦ . Owen Chong defended from the big blind with A♦ 4♦ .
On the flop of J♣ 6♥ 6♦ , Chong and Kagawa checked and Lam bet 1,200,000. Only Kagawa made the call.
The 9♥ hit on the turn, Kagawa checked over again and Lam fired out 3,500,000 this time to collect the pot.
Hand 47 Owen Chong raised from the small blind to 4,500,000 and won the pot.
Player | Chips |
---|---|
JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | 27,000,000(54 BB) |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 12,000,000(24 BB) |
Dang Thi Hue Has Been Eliminated in 9th Place For TWD 1,500,000 (~USD 46,300)

Hand 40 Dang Thi Hue raised to 2,000,000 from early position and Wayne Lam called. Akira Takasugi also came along from the small blind. Rintaro Kagawa defended from the big blind.
On the flop of 8♦ Q♥ T♠ , Takasugi checked to Kagawa who shoved all in for 5,900,000. Hue also went all in for 25,000,000. Lam and Takasugi folded.
Dang Thi Hue: A♥ T♦
Rintaro Kagawa: K♣ Q♣
Kagawa picked up the lead with a superior flopped pair of queens against Hue's pair of tens. The 3♦ hit on the turn, and Hue was still looking to spike an ace or ten to stay alive.
However, the dealer soon delivered bad new to the Vietnamese player as the river bricked off 6♥ , finishing Hue's tournament run in ninth place for a payday of TWD 1,500,000 (~USD 46,300).

Player | Chips |
---|---|
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 14,250,000(29 BB) |
DT Dang Thi Hue | busted |
Kagawa Flops A King

Hand 30 Rintaro Kagawa raised from under the gun to 800,000 with A♣ K♣ and Akira Takasugi called with T♣ 7♣ in the big blind.
On the flop of 6♦ K♥ 4♥ , Takasugi checked to Kaggawa, who fired 1,000,000 and collected the pot.
Hand 31 Iat Man Leong raised the hijack to 800,000 with A♣ 2♥ and won the pot.
Hand 32 Owen Chong opened the cutoff to 800,000 with J♥ T♥ and won the pot.
Hand 33 Wayne Lam raised from under the gun to 800,000 with K♣ J♥ and won the pot.
Hand 34 Leong raised from early positon to 800,000 with A♥ 3♥ and Lam called from the big blind with Q♦ 2♦ .
On the flop of K♣ 6♦ 7♠ , Leong bet 450,000 and won the pot.
Player | Chips |
---|---|
IM Iat Man Leong | 28,000,000(70 BB) |
JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | 21,000,000(53 BB) |
AT Akira Takasugi | 8,900,000(22 BB) |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 8,400,000(21 BB) |
Leong With a Massive Double Up

Hand 14 Iat Man Leong made it 600,000 from middle position and only Rintaro Kagawa called from the small blind.
When the flop came down T♥ 6♣ K♦ , Kagawa checked, and Leong bet 350,000. Kagawa called.
The Q♦ rolled off on the turn and Kagawa checked again. Leong fired a second barrel of 1,200,000, which caused Kagawa to go into the tank. After using a time bank chip, Kagawa check-raised to 4,500,000. Leong used a few time banks of his own before opting to call.
A board-pairing K♣ appeared on the river. Kagawa bet 5,000,000 and Leong again went into the tank. Leong had 6,425,000 remaining in his stack, and after doing some inventory, made the call.
Iat Man Leong: Q♥ Q♣
Rintaro Kagawa: A♣ J♠
Leong rivered a full house to win the pot after Kagawa turned a Broadway straight. Leong's rail erupted when they saw he had the winner as he now became the chip leader of the APT Main Event fianl table.

Player | Chips |
---|---|
IM Iat Man Leong | 22,925,000(76 BB) |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 8,975,000(30 BB) |
Lam Takes Some from Hue

Hand 5 Akira Takasugi made it 600,000 from the button with K♦ T♥ and Rintaro Kagawa three-bet to 2,000,000 holding A♦ K♣ from the small blind. Everyone folded.
Hand 6 Nishant Kumar came in with a raise to 600,000 from middle position with J♣ 6♣ , and Dang Thi Hue three-bet to 4,400,000 from the big blind with just one big blind behind. Kumar folded.
Hand 7 Hue called from the smal blind with Q♥ 9♠ and Wayne Lam raised to 1,000,000 with 8♦ 5♠ out of the big blind. Hue stuck in the call.
On the 5♦ 2♦ T♥ flop Hue checked, and then folded to a bet of 600,000 from Lam.
Hand 8 Owen Chong bumped up the action to 600,000 with K♥ 2♥ . Takasugi three-bet to 1,600,000 with A♣ K♠ and took down the pot.
Player | Chips |
---|---|
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 20,000,000(67 BB) |
JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | 19,000,000(63 BB) |
OC Owen Chong | 15,000,000(50 BB) |
AT Akira Takasugi | 10,000,000(33 BB) |
DT Dang Thi Hue | 78,000(0 BB) |
Kawagga Chips Up Through His Countrymate
Hand 1 Shinichiro Kano raied to 600,000 with K♠ 2♠ on the button and Iat Man Leong three-bet to 1,100,000 from the small blind with T♣ 3♣ to collect the pot.
Hand 2 Nishant Kumar lim[ed in from the small blind with J♦ T♥ and Owen Chong raised the big blind to 850,000 with Q♥ 6♣ to win the pot.
Hand 3 Wayne Lam raised to 600,000 with J♣ 5♣ from early position and Leong three-bet to 1,400,000 with A♥ J♦ in the cutoff. Lam folded.
Hand 4 Akira Takasugi limped in from the small blind with 4♦ 4♣ and Rintaro Kagawa three-bet to 1,000,000 in the big blind with K♣ 9♣ . Takasugi called. On the monotone flop of 6♥ 5♥ J♥ , Takasugi checked and Kawagga bet 800,000 to collect the pot.
Player | Chips |
---|---|
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 19,000,000(63 BB) |
AT Akira Takasugi | 9,200,000(31 BB) |
Biggest APT Main Event Ever Crowns Champion Today

There will be a charged atmosphere inside Taipei’s Red Space venue as the APT Taipei 2025 Main Event charges into its final day. Nine poker warriors, forged through four days of relentless battles, take their seats to claim the richest title in Asian Poker Tour history. With a TWD 19,009,440 (~$586,710) payday for the champion at stake, today is where history will be made.
Hong Kong’s Wayne Lam leads with 17,925,000 chips, and is positoned advantageously to set himself up to take home the lion's share of the TWD 121,033,440 (~$3.7 million) prize pool. Japan’s Rintaro Kagawa trails closely with 17,825,000, hungry for his biggest score. Malaysia’s Owen Chong is sitting pretty in third with 15,375,000, while Vietnam’s Dang Thi Hue, a former Main Event champion, sits with 4,700,000, ready to defy her short stack.
Final Table Chip Counts
Player | Chips |
---|---|
JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | 17,925,000 |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 17,825,000 |
OC Owen Chong | 15,375,000 |
AT Akira Takasugi | 10,775,000 |
NK Nishant Kumar | 10,525,000 |
IM Iat Man Leong | 10,075,000 |
SK Shinichiro Kano | 8,450,000 |
KS Kiwanont Sukhum | 6,050,000 |
DT Dang Thi Hue | 4,700,000 |
Lurking in the middle, Japan’s Akira Takasugi (10,775,000), India’s Nishant Kumar (10,525,000) and Macau’s Iat Man Leong (10,075,000) bring average stacks into today's proceedings, and may be trying to lader up a few spots before making their move for the title. Kano Shinichiro (8,450,000) sits in seventh, but it far enough clear of the bottom of the pack to use patience to his advantage.

Everyone has locked up at least TWD 1,500,000 (~$46,300) for making it this far, but the top prize and trophy are now within touching distance. Play resumes at 11:15 AM and will continue until one of these players is the APT Taipei 2025 Main Event champion. There’s forty-nine minutes remaining in Level 34 where the blinds will be 150,000/300 with a big blind ante of 300,000.
APT Taipei Main Event Final Table Payouts
Place | Payout (USD) |
---|---|
1 | $586,710 |
2 | $312,745 |
3 | $211,945 |
4 | $163,350 |
5 | $136,405 |
6 | $110,000 |
7 | $83,995 |
8 | $60,770 |
9 | $46,295 |
*includes APTC Main Event seat valued at TWD 350,000
All the action from the Red Space venue in Taipai, Taiwan will be streamed on a30-minute delay, ensuring fans can follow the action without spoilers. Live updates will remain in sync with the broadcast to provide a seamless experience.
Final Table Chip Count
Player | Chips |
---|---|
JW Jin Wing Wayne Lam | 17,925,000 |
RK Rintaro Kagawa | 17,825,000 |
OC Owen Chong | 15,375,000 |
AT Akira Takasugi | 10,775,000 |
NK Nishant Kumar | 10,525,000 |
IM Iat Man Leong | 10,075,000 |
SK Shinichiro Kano | 8,450,000 |
KS Kiwanont Sukhum | 6,050,000 |
DT Dang Thi Hue | 4,700,000 |