Hand of the Week: Fitness influencer Togi can't outrun aces

TOGI and Airball HCL
Mo Afdhal
Posted on: January 19, 2026 11:56 PST

Shane Stoffer, better known as 'TOGI', made his debut appearance on Hustler Casino Live on Friday, playing $25/$50 against sisters Alexandra and Andrea Botez, YouTuber Ethan Klein, and Mariano Grandoli

The fitness influencer turned gambling content creator put on a volatile display during his brief time on the show, swinging between wins and losses frequently. After about twenty minutes, Stoffer was stuck a little over $15,000. An hour later, he was up more than $30,000. Then he soared north of $40,000 – and it looked as though his gamble-heavy strategy might pay off, even with the likes of Grandoli and the other professionals ready to pounce on any missteps. 

Like Icarus before him, Stoffer's ill-formed mechanism of flight betrayed him in the end as he flew too near to one of Los Angeles' brightest stars: Nik 'Airball' Arcot

Straddle gone wrong

With Stoffer's $600 straddle in play, Arcot was first to act with and raised to $3,000. When the action folded all the way around to him, Stoffer looked down at

"Are you ready to lose?" he asked Arcot. "All in." 

Without a word, Arcot slid forward calling chips. 

"Here we go," Stoffer roared, brimming with a confidence that did not last long as Arcot revealed his pocket aces.

With $51,900 in the middle, the players opted to run a single board and Stoffer found no help as it came down

TOGI takes his leave

It was about thirty minutes later when the two clashed again. Ohio David kicked off the action with a raise to $500 with . Randall Emmett called behind with before Stoffer three-bet to $2,050 with . Arcot then looked down at in the straddle position and four-bet to $10,000. Ohio David and Emmett fled the scene, but Stoffer stuck the entirety of his $31,425 stack in the middle and Arcot quickly called. 

Again, the players opted for a single board with $63,900 in the pot. When the cards hit their backs, Stoffer wasn't pleased.

"That is disgusting," he said. "Alright, big time sweat. We need a miracle." 

There was no miracle to be had, however, as the board ran out and, for the second time in the session, Stoffer's chips were absorbed into Arcot's stack. 

While he took the tough beats well, Stoffer decided to call it quits after his second stacking to book a loss of nearly $60,000.