AUSSIE INSURANCE MAN WINS APPT GRAND FINAL
12 December 2008
34-year-old Sydney player shows 'em how to make a
million
The Asia Pacific Poker Tour's Grand Final tourney ended
in victory for 34-year-old Sydney insurance worker
Martin Rowe this weekend, giving his bank account a
Australian $1 million (about US$643 000) boost for
surviving a 477 player entry list that included WSOP
champs Peter Eastgate and Chris Moneymaker, and winning
the popular event after a nine hour final table.
Rowe, who only two months ago started a business
building financial models for life insurance companies,
said he may now consider life as a professional poker
player. "I think I might take a break from work,'' he
said.
The final table, which included seven Aussies in all,
assembled Sunday at the Star City Casino in Sydney after
a week of poker as the 477 entry field was whittled down
to Antonio Fazzolari holding the final table chip lead,
Tom Rafferty, Hai Bo Chu, Daniel Kowalski, Frank
Saffioti, Jason Gray, Martin Rowe, Timothy English and
Tony Basile.
Fazzolari looked set to dominate the final as he used
his big stack to good effect and eliminbated several
players, but he was overtaken by the steady and
disciplined Rowe and eliminated in fourth place, earning
A$182 000.
Rowe went on to eliminate other players until he faced
professional player Jason Gray in the heads up with an
almost 7 to 1 chip lead. The match might have ended
quickly with such a disparity, but Gray delivered a
spirited performance of skill and determination, drawing
out the heads up to around two hours of gruelling play.
It was not enough to stop the tenascious Rowe, however,
and Gray was finally eliminated in second place, taking
home A$476 000.
It was Rowe's first major tournament title, for which he
collected the A$1 million top prize, a sponsored seat in
the APPT Tournament of Champions and an impressive
trophy.
Rowe has come a long way since he started playing in pub
poker tourneys three years ago, and said he was both
thrilled with the win, but a little bewildered by it.
"It feels great; but it hasn't really sunk in,'' he
said. "I haven't really made any decisions at all about
how it's changed my life or what I'm going to do with
it.''
After building his experience in pub tournaments, Rowe
started playing the Star City tournaments six months
ago, where he honed his poker skills.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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