Yuri Dzivielevski Cruises to Victory in $100k Super High Roller Bowl Mixed Games

Jon Sofen
Senior Editor U.S.
2 min read
Yuri Dzivielevski

Jared Bleznick pulled a monster sports card during the $100,000 Super High Roller Bowl Mixed Games final table. But Yuri Dzivielevski won the 38-player tournament at the PokerGO Studio in Las Vegas for $1,300,000.

Bleznick, owner of Blez Sports, a card breaking business in Las Vegas, provided some entertainment during the livestream when he ripped expensive boxes of 2025-2026 Topps Sapphire NBA that retail for around $5,000. Along with Nick Schulman, who also busted short of winning the tournament but wanted in on the sports card gamble, "Blez," after ripping a series of dud packs, pulled a Cooper Flagg gold rookie auto numbered to 50, meaning there are only half-a-hundred in existence.

Flagg, the top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, is the most coveted NBA star among collectors. The 19-year-old rookie forward from Duke appears to be destined for superstardom, and has already exceeded his lofty expectations just 49 games into his pro career. Bleznick's card, based on recent comps on similar cards, should go for around $10,000 at auction, and significantly more if the poker players send it off for grading and it earns a Gem Mint grade.

They Played Some Poker Too

Bleznick and Schulman did more during the final table on PokerGO than rip sports cards. They also played some poker, along with five other players, but neither lasted long on Saturday. Schulman, a 2025 Poker Hall of Fame inductee, was first to go in seventh place for $155,000. Mr. Sports Cards, a pot-limit Omaha specialist, was eliminated in sixth place for $225,000.

Tobias Leknes was the next out the door in fifth place for $300,000. It was quite a grind after that point until Dzivielevski clipped Robert Wells in fourth place, which paid $415,000. Benny Glaser enjoyed that elimination, as he earned a sizable pay jump while sitting on less than two big bets.

Final Table Results

RankPlayerCountryChip Count
1Yuri DzivielevskiBrazil$1,300,000
2Chad EveslageUnited States$835,000
3Benny GlaserUnited Kingdom$570,000
4Robert WellsWales$415,000
5Tobias LeknesNorway$300,000
6Jared BleznickUnited States$225,000
7Nick SchulmanUnited States$155,000

After Wells was sent home, Glaser, in limit hold'em, earned an immediate double-up against the chip leader, who barely felt the loss. Dzivielevski had about 80% of all chips in play. There wouldn't be a second double-up for Glaser, however. He got it all in preflop with A6 but Dzivielevski, who had 105, rivered a straight.

That sent Glaser out the door in third place for $570,000 eight months after winning three bracelets at the 2025 World Series of Poker (WSOP). Heads-up play then began between Dzivielevski and Chad Eveslage, who trailed about 7:1 in chips. The match lasted all of five minutes when Dzivielevski hit a premium Badugi hand to send Eveslage, who earned $835,000, out the door in second place.

Dzivielevski now has over $11.7 million in The Hendon Mob live tournament cashes. He extended his lead on Brazil's all-time list.

*Photo courtesy of Antonio Abrego & PokerGO

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Jon Sofen
Senior Editor U.S.

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