Minh Anh Nguyen conquers record-breaking Poker Dream Vietnam Main Event; exclusive interview and recap inside
In front of a booming rail, Vietnam’s own Minh Anh Nguyen overcame a deficit at heads up to emerge as the first ever Poker Dream Vietnam Main Event champion. The monumental victory earned Nguyen a career high ₫3,378,000,000 (~$137,700) and bragging rights as the first to capture this coveted title on home soil. Relive the action via the Live Updates.
Somuchpoker had a chance to interview the champ, asking how it felt to win the event.
Nguyen: Of course it feels good to win the biggest event in Vietnam to date. I’ve won tourneys before but nothing beats the feeling of holding the Main Event title. Also clinching this title means that Vietnamese poker is not far behind our neighbor, so it feels truly amazing.
SMP: Coming into the final day with just 19 players remaining, you came in with the third largest stack, what was your strategy?
Nguyen: Same as always, avoid getting into tough spots because I understand the real battle only starts at the Final 9 table.
SMP: What was one of your toughest laydowns?
Nguyen: Late on Day 2, I was very short and I had to laydown Pocket Tens to two other players 3-bets. They showed QQ and AK. I would have busted.
SMP: Once you reached the final table, what was your strategy coming in as one of the biggest stacks? Did you feel you had an edge over some players?
Nguyen: I was feeling calm and collected, very confident to finish in the top 3 spots. In my mind, I already picked out the last four players to be Winfred, Brandon, Tien and me. Two of the five Vietnamese players were short, so I basically just needed to wait for their departure. Huu Manh had a massive stack but he almost never plays with non-premium hands.
SMP: Who did you feel was your toughest opponent?
Nguyen: Toughest opponents must be Winfred Yu and Brandon Koh. I sat with Brandon on Day 1 and I saw how he managed his stack, very well throughout different levels. Winfred is one of the high roller regulars so I always have to watch out for him.
SMP: At three-handed you were sandwiched between larger stacks, what was your strategy?
Nguyen: At that point, I was dealt unplayable hands for a long time. I was definitely feeling the heat from chip leader Brandon. I know I cant stay in this situation for much longer so I decided to make a gutsy move of shoving with Two-Four offsuit. Stealing that pot was such a relief, so much tension released, it boosted my morale.
SMP: Speaking of gutsy, at heads up, you were behind in chips but still deep, then you three-bet pushed with over 30 BB holding Jack-Eight off. Why, and what was your thought process?
Nguyen: Everyone was asking about the Jack-Eight hand, it’s because I’ve built a very solid table image with Brandon, showing him only premium hands during our feature table session. And I never bluff shoved once on him at the table. Also, I think 30 BB is a good spot to limit his calling range with our stack distribution. I was surprised he called but it turned out to be good fortune for me.
SMP: Lastly, how do you plan to celebrate this huge accomplishment?
Nguyen: Take a short break because there are lots of events from now until the end of the year. I am feeling good and aiming for another main event very soon.
SMP: Thank you Minh and congratulations again on your victory!
Event recap
On just its second ever event, Poker Dream set new heights for brands in Asia to reach, amassing record numbers in Vietnam, the highest ever witnessed in the country. The highly anticipated Main Event guaranteed ₫10B, the largest ever announced for Vietnam, kicked off on October 20 and ran through October 23.
Over three starting days, it built an 822 entry field for a record prize pool of ₫17,940,150,000 (~$731,350). The money flowed on Day 2 with Seung Yeol Kim eliminating Kartik Ved on a cooler. The stage ended with 19 players in the lineup, six were from the host country, three of them were front runners.
Buy in: ₫25,000,000 (~$1,020)
Guarantee: ₫10,000,000,000 (~$407,665)
Entries: 822
Prize pool: ₫17,940,150,000 (~$731,350)
ITM: 119 places
The 11-hour final day title-chase was loaded with incredibly thrilling poker starting with the rise of Huu Manh Nguyen who entered third to the last in chips then charged upwards fast to carry in the largest stack into the final table. Huu Manh was certainly the most fiery player of all, celebrating every knockout and successful hero-call with gusto. He eliminated Hojin Kim to form the final 9.
Final table payouts
1st | Minh A Nguyen | Vietnam | ₫3,378,000,000 |
2nd | Brandon Koh | Malaysia | ₫2,055,000,000 |
3rd | Winfred Yu | Hong Kong | ₫1,452,150,000 |
4th | Ngo Minh Tien | Vietnam | ₫1,093,400,000 |
5th | Huu Manh Nguyen | Vietnam | ₫862,000,000 |
6th | Zong Chi He | Taiwan | ₫646,700,000 |
7th | Dennis Ng | Hong Kong | ₫459,000,000 |
8th | Nam Hoang Nguyen | Vietnam | ₫318,400,000 |
9th | Dinh Van Tien | Vietnam | ₫251,600,000 |
Topping Huu Manh’s story was the unfathomable comeback of Malaysia’s Brandon Koh from just half a big blind at 13 remaining to runner up. Koh plunged after Wai Sim Kok‘s spiked the Queen to outdraw . The next hand, small blind Koh won the blinds and ante then from there, he doubled up three times to rise back to health with 25 BB stack. This was enough to once again be a threat. At the final table, he took the lead on a double up through Huu Manh, and nearly won the entire shebang.
The biggest story however was that of Minh Anh Nguyen who was the runt for most of three handed until he landed a double up through Yu. After Yu was sent packing by Koh in 3rd place, it was heads up with Koh ahead 60 BB to Nguyen’s 38 BB. An hour or so later with not much change in stack sizes, tables turned when Nguyen three-bet shoved his 30 BB with . To Nguyen’s surprise, Koh tank-called with . The board ran { to deny Koh the win. With ranks switched, Nguyen went on to win it.
Final hand, Koh limped, Nguyen checked. The flop was Nguyen check-called. The turn , Koh bet, Nguyen check-called again. On the river Koh double barreled, this time Nguyen check-jammed, Koh tanked for a long time then risked his tournament life. The livestream had Koh with , Nguyen had flush.
Payouts 9th – 19th
9th | Dinh Van Tien | Vietnam | 251,600,000 |
10th | Hojin Kim | Korea | 207,300,000 |
11th | Wai Sim Kok | Malaysia | 207,300,000 |
12th | Fu Bang Huang | Taiwan | 185,400,000 |
13th | Dhaval Mudgal | India | 185,400,000 |
14th | Hazel Chui | 167,400,000 | |
15th | Haerok Lee | Korea | 167,400,000 |
16th | Anh Hoai Tran | Vietnam | 149,500,000 |
17th | Jenam Yu | Korea | 149,500,000 |
18th | Ha Duong | Vietnam | 131,600,000 |
19th | David Erquiaga | Philippines | 131,600,000 |
Live Updates page
Poker Dream Player Guide
Daily event pics – Somuchpoker fb page
Article links:
Main Event info
Main Event Day 1A recap
Main Event shatters guarantee, sets new Vietnam record
Main Event champion to be crowned
Poker Dream releases Hoi An full schedule
Poker Dream makes landfall in Hoi An, Vietnam
Poker Dream kicks off
Poker Dream: Day 1 recap
Poker Dream: First four trophies awarded
Poker Dream: Taiwan, Malaysia, Thailand lift trophies
Poker Dream: Ewe Eng Soon wins the SHR for $215K