April 14 2011, Mickey Doft

The 2011 PokerStars.net North American Poker Tour Mohegan Sun High Roller Bounty Shootout concluded on Thursday and much like the Main Event on Wednesday, it was déjà vu all over again. Team PokerStars Pro Jason Mercier, last year’s NAPT Mohegan Sun Bounty Shootout champion, was back at it. Having watched Vanessa Selbst repeat as Main Event Champion the day before, there was no doubt that Mercier looked to do the same. He would have to get through an impressive bunch to do so, though.
Here is how the seating assignments looked for the final table.
| 1 | Taylor von Kriegenbergh | 2 |
| 2 | Joe Sweeney | 6 |
| 3 | Micah Raskin | 3 |
| 4 | Michael Pesek | 2 |
| 5 | Eugene Katchalov | 4 |
| 6 | Jimmie Guinther | 3 |
| 7 | Scott Blackman | 4 |
| 8 | Jonathan Jaffe | 2 |
| 9 | Jason Mercier | 7 |
Bounties were kicked up to $10,000 at the final table, having been $2,000 each at the first flight of tables. Also up for grabs was an additional $20,000 and automatic entry into the next NAPT bounty shootout for the player who won the most bounties. Aside from that, a first-place prize of $142,600 was on the line.
The first to drop at the final table was Joe Sweeney, shoving with 
on a 

board and running smack into Eugene Katchalov’s 
. Sweeney did not find the miracle suckout and exited in ninth place. Micah Raskin hit the rail next after his 
fell to Jonathan Jaffe’s 
. Scott Blackman busted in seventh place after losing in a three-way pot with 
against Jimmie Guinther’s 
and Michael Pesek’s 
. The board ran out 



as Pesek hit the river to cripple Guinther and end Blackman’s tournament. A short-stacked Guinther, with 
, was finished off by Pesek’s pocket deuces a few hands later and took sixth place.
The cruelest hand of the final table occurred with five left as Taylor von Kriegenbergh held 
and looked to eliminate Eugene Katchalov and his 
. The 

flop was harmless, but von Kriegenbergh spiked the lead when the
turn left Katchalov two outs to survive. On cue, the
popped off and left von Kriegenbergh short stacked, busting a few hands later at the hands of Michael Pesek. Jonathan Jaffe was the next to go when his 
ran into Jason Mercier’s 
. A clean board for Mercier ended Jaffe’s day with a fourth-place finish.
Michael Pesek fell in third place after his 
failed to hold against Eugene Katchalov’s 
when the board came down 



. The heads-up play chip counts between the two Team PokerStars Pros began as follows:
Mercier: 269,600
Katchalov: 180,400
It did not take long for the chips to get in. On a 

board, Mercier held 
for top pair and an open-ended straight draw while Katchalov tabled 
for bottom two pair. The turn brought the
and kept Katchalov in the lead, but the river delivered the knockout blow in the form of the
to give Mercier a better two pair to take it down. For his runner-up showing, Katchalov earned $66,000.
Final Table Results
| 1 | Jason Mercier | $246,600 |
| 2 | Eugene Katchalov | $68,000 |
| 3 | Michael Pesek | $70,000 |
| 4 | Jonathan Jaffe | $54,000 |
| 5 | Taylor von Kriegenbergh | $44,000 |
| 6 | Jimmie Guinther | $42,000 |
| 7 | Scott Blackman | $44,000 |
| 8 | Micah Raskin | $46,000 |
| 9 | Joe Sweeney | $52,000 |
What more can you say about Jason Mercier? Having won six bounties at his first table and another three at the final table to win the most bounties, Mercier collected a cool $246,600 for his performance in the 2011 NAPT Mohegan Sun Bounty Shootout. More impressive, though, is his repeat performance as champion, capping off an amazing week here at the Mohegan Sun as both major events were won by last year’s respective champions.
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Fri, 04/15/2011 – 01:16 – PokerPages Staff
The English Luddites back in the seventeenth century tried to oppose the rise of new technologies that were threatening their livelihoods by smashing them to pieces. We 21st century techno geeks have generally taken a more enthusiastic view of new technology, eager to get to grips with it and let it show us what it can do. But does it always amount to progress? In the poker world, there is one area where the question remains open and the jury is still out – the use of electronic poker tables in poker rooms.
They have not enjoyed anything resembling what could be called a ‘success story’ so far. In 2009, the first all-electronic poker room debuted in the Excalibur Casino in Las Vegas. Constructed by PokerTek, the 12 state-of-the-art electronic poker tables were thought to be a revolutionary development when they were unveiled. However, less than a year later, the room was closed. The reason? Well, they just could not replicate the real interactive cut and thrust of a live poker game, which was precisely what visitors to Vegas were seeking out primarily. Clever though they undoubtedly were, they still ended up being mothballed in favor of the real thing. Therefore, history shows that electronic poker made only a brief appearance in Sin City and then dropped out of sight, like a one hit pop singer.
Just about the only place where you could find an electronic poker table after that was on a cruise ship; everywhere else, most poker enthusiasts were of the opinion that they were a dud invention and were now rightly in the trash can of history. Then along came Ho-Chunk Gaming Madison in Wisconsin. During Thanksgiving 2010, it opened the state’s first exclusively electronic poker room. Did this company read the sad story of electronic poker rooms? Is this a self-deluded race to the bottom? Well, no, actually. The new poker room is in a state of rude health and has thrived from the moment it opened its doors.
So how has Ho-Chung Gaming managed to overcome what was widely perceived as electronic poker’s failure to deliver the true thrills and spills of an authentic poker game? The lack of legal options for poker in the state appears to be one reason. In Wisconsin, the game has taken place largely in unregulated backroom card parlors, according to Ho-Chunk Gaming’s Poker Room Supervisor, Shawn Bauer, where players have no guarantees on game integrity or safety. His company, he insists, is not trying to squeeze out the other poker available in Madison, but it is seeking to give the local poker community a new option. Plausibly, he argues that the new poker room comes with outstanding standards for integrity, accuracy, safety and professionalism, which many in the poker community will see as a desirable product. Judging by the steady growth of the room’s success, he seems to be quite correct in his statement.
Bauer’s view is that ePoker has real strengths that were underappreciated in the past: there is virtually no room for error (live dealers, no matter how skilled and experienced they may be, are still human beings and inevitably make mistakes occasionally). In Ho-Chunk Gaming Madison’s new poker room, the most common mistakes are effectively abolished: there is no premature card exposure, no misdeals, no errors in secondary and tertiary pots and no mistaken mucking of cards, Bauer proudly declares.
ePoker looks like it is back and planning to stay.




