Game Type: | No Limit |
Buy-in: | £75 |
Entries: | 120 |
Rebuys: | no |

At a buy-in of only £75 and with 10,000 starting chips and a 40 minute clock, the structure was designed to give the players who had been lucky enough to secure entry real opportunities for creative play and an antithesis to the shallow stack re-buy competitions normally provided for new and recreational players around the country.
The Tour sponsors, PokerStars.com, are providing an expenses paid entry to an EPT event for the winners of each of the seven Series One events and the added prize for the winner of the inaugural tournament was entry in to January 2007’s EPT in Copenhagen with a total value of €8,000. Also provided were cash prizes to the top nine finishers, medals for the top three and an engraved championship cup to the winner.
In another innovation, play began on each of the two days at 3pm and finished on Day One before midnight to allow potentially inexperienced players to avoid playing at unfamiliar times for them. A feature of the competition was the remarkable atmosphere it was played in. Each and every player exiting the competition was warmly applauded by all the other competitors, the dealers joined in the fun and the sometimes intimidating nature of festival events with an occasional air of jaded cynicism was entirely absent.

Elsewhere the tournament was beginning to hot up. A feature of the next two days was going to be some unfortunate bad beats. Take this one for example. Stephen Waddington with Q-Q and Jeff Povey with K-K are all in pre-flop together with a short-stacked Christian Briggs with A-T. The board provided a real rollercoaster of emotions for all three players : A-T-Q-K-Q, so quads beat the full house and a flopped two pair.
Amongst other players challenging on the first evening were Nigel Johnson whose A-A held up in a multiway coup to propel him towards overnight chip leader, Mark Donnelly whose A-Q bust A-A by making a straight on the river and Alistair Fowler who was the life and soul of the party and bluffed and bullied his way to a big stack as well as catching big hands at perfect times such as finding A-A on the button with the cut-off already having pushed.
At the end of the first day 33 players had survived. Chip leaders were Alistair Fowler with 74,000 and Nigel Johnson with 73,000 followed by Liverpool’s Jimmy Doran with 62,700. The remainder of the field, a few short-stacks apart, were tightly grouped in the 30-50,000 region. Blinds on the return were due to be 1000-2000 so there remained plenty of play.

One of the key hands of the tournament occurred with 19 players left. This was a vital moment of the tournament because the top 18 finishers were to receive APAT player of the year points, the Player of the Year receiving a WPT package as their prize. Matthew Milne raised UTG and Nigel Johnson pushed all-in from mid position for 80,000 chips. Matthew instantly called with A-A and a forlorn Nigel turned over K-K. When the A-A held up, Matthew had over 250,000 of the 1.2m chips in play and then executed an impressive aggressive big stack game to go deep in the tournament.
At around 6.30pm on day 2 we were down to our final table as follows:
1. Antony Wolsely from Halifax: 42,000
2. Jimmy Doran from Liverpool: 60,000
3. Matthew Milne from Glasgow: 273,000
4. Steve Parker from London: 75,000
5. Mark Donnelly from Birmingham: 153,000
6. Scott Moore from Cumbernauld: 50,000
7. Dan Phillips from Tamworth: 240,000
8. Andy Winkett from Cradley Heath: 121,000
9. Trevor Heath from Cornwall: 74,000
10. Alistair Fowler from Elgin: 123,000

At that point, Scott Moore, who had played an incredibly patient an disciplined game, moved into contention with a treble up, all-in pre-flop with two callers, as his A-Q won with Ace high! Andy Winkett departed in 7th and at that point the blinds, moving to 10,000-20,000 began to bite. A see-saw battle ensued with chip counts swinging wildly as the players aggressively battled for finishing positions in the top three where the payout structure had concentrated the rewards and more specifically the top spot with the added value.
Matthew Milne experienced a particularly up and down level, his A-K call of an all-in by Doran being beaten by T-9 and A-T by Q-J to the same player. However Jimmy Doran then re-raised all in with pocket Tens. Unfortunately for him, Wolsely was holding A-A to eliminate him in 6th. Wolsely’s situation was soon to turn though when he attempted to eliminate Donnelly by calling his all-in with A-T suited and lost to A-Q. When he then lost a race with a pair versus K-Q suited he was out in 5th.
Four handed the chip counts were even, the blinds were big and the prize structure top heavy. A little bit of luck was required for one of the four remaining to triumph. Here Daniel Phillips won two key hands. J-J versus Moore’s A-K and K-Q versus Milne’s T-T to move into a healthy chip lead. When Scott Moore, short-stacked, ran into A-J after pushing with K-T, he was out in 4th and Milne unluckily left in 3rd having lost the important races at the wrong times.

Daniel Phillips is therefore the English Amateur Poker Champion and off to the EPT Copenhagen as part of his prize
Details of how to join APAT and the future live schedule can be found on www.apat.com