The 2026 Super High Roller Bowl: Mixed Games event hit the final seven late on Friday night in Las Vegas, after Michael Mizrachi busted on the money bubble. The 2025 WSOP Main Event winner couldn’t find the double in a hand against Jared Bleznick.
Action had been way faster than anyone had anticipated, and after a short discussion, the players decided to continue for another level, or until they reached the final five. In the end, it turned out that Mizrachi would be the last elimination of the night.
Yuri Dzivielevski came into Day 2 as chipleader, and he’ll start the final table as chipleader. The Brazilian has been on an absolute tear in the PokerGO Studio this week and will be looking to round it off with a $1.3 million win here on Saturday night.
However, right behind him is Brit pro Benny Glaser, along with five other mixed-game masters. Here are the final seven who will return to play down to a winner on Saturday.
Seat 1: Robert Wells
- Tournament winnings: $833,421
- WSOP bracelets: 1
- Chips: 730,000
One of the two less established names at this final table, Wells is a British pro who will hit the $1 million mark in all-time winnings with his cash here. His first tournament cash might have been way back in 2009, but Wells only took the game up seriously four years ago. He has a PhD in math, and his direction in poker led him to become friends and study partners with Yuri Dzivielevski.
He won his first WSOP bracelet last summer in the $3,000 Mixed Games: Nine Game Mix 7-Handed in 2025. That was only his second ever tournament win, to go with a $485 HORSE event at the 2023 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. Wells’ biggest cash is his bracelet win for $228,115. To date, he only has one other six-figure score, for $112,000 in the $25K 10-Game Mix Championship at the PokerGO Studio this time last year.
Seat 2: Jared Bleznick
- Tournament winnings: $10,114,561
- WSOP bracelets: 1
- Chips: 1,380,000
Bleznick might prefer sports cards to playing cards, but when he puts his mind to poker, he’s one of the best players on the planet. He’s even combined his two passions: unboxing sports cards while playing at the highest stakes.
He’s already got a Super High Roller Bowl title to his name, when he took down the $100K PLO version in October 2023 for $1,292,000. His biggest tournament cash was for his WSOP bracelet, in the $50K High Roller event in the summer of 2024. That netted him $2 million of his $10.1 million in all-time winnings.
Bleznick only comes out for the big tournaments now. He’s only cashed twice since the start of 2025, in the $25K NLH High Roller at the WSOP and a seventh-place finish in the 2025 $100K PLO Super High Roller. We saw more of him at last summer’s WSOP, though, as he took a spin in the commentary booth. He drew a lot of praise for that and stated afterward, “I know what the people want.” We suspect we might hear from him again in Vegas this summer.
Seat 3: Tobias Leknes
- Tournament winnings: $1,114,898
- WSOP bracelets: 0
- Chips: 1,305,000
Norwegian pro Tobias Leknes is the other player you may not have heard of. He has 20 tournament wins – mostly mixed game events – to his name, but most of them are much lower stakes. His biggest single cash is $99,763 when he finished 13th in the 2025 EPT Barcelona Main Event.
However, this only tells half his story. Leknes does most of his work online and boasts seven SCOOP and 13 WCOOP titles. Friday the 13th was a lucky day for him as he battled back from a short stack to bag the fourth biggest stack of the final seven.
Seat 4: Benny Glaser
- Tournament winnings: $10,457,966
- WSOP bracelets: 8
- Chips: 3,295,000
Benny Glaser is a British pro who is known as one of the most fearsome mixed game players in the world. He’s won eight WSOP bracelets and picked up his last three in the summer of 2025 over the course of just three weeks. Those bracelets came in the Dealers Choice, the Mixed Omaha 8 or Better, and the Mixed Limit Triple Draw Lowball events. Glaser knows his poker variants. You can add no-limit hold’em to that mix. Glaser finished third in the 2022 WPT World Championship for his career-best cash of $2,830,000.
Glaser finished fifth in this event last year for $225,000. He’s already guaranteed to match that and will be eyeing the $1.3 million up top.
Seat 5: Chad Eveslage
- Tournament winnings: $11,938,358
- WSOP bracelets: 4
- Chips: 600,000
Eveslage won his fourth WSOP bracelet last summer in one of the most prestigious events – the $25K HORSE High Roller. He beat out a final table that included Brian Rast and Phil Ivey to claim the gold and $883,841. But he won another event in 2025 that’s more relevant here. Eveslage is the reigning Super High Roller Bowl: Mixed Games champ – a title that netted him $1,200,000 last March. Can he defend it as the short stack?
Eveslage has had a hot start to 2026, already winning the PGT Championship at the PokerGO Studio, and will be looking to add another Super High Roller Bowl ring to his collection on Saturday night.
Seat 6: Yuri Dzivielevski
- Tournament winnings: $10,428,733
- WSOP bracelets: 5
- Chips: 3,380,000
Dzivielevski tipped over the $10 million in tournament winnings mark this past week when he won his first ever PGT title and finished second in two others in the Mixed Games series. He took $262,350 for winning Event 5 and got even more ($312,000) for finishing second in Event 7 – the $25K 10-Game Championship. Dzivielevski was also crowned the 2026 PGT Mixed Games Champion on the back of these results.
Dzivielevski carried on his hot run in the PokerGO Studio to the Super High Roller Bowl. He was the Day 1 chipleader and has the biggest stack going onto the final table. A win here would almost rival his biggest-ever cash – $1,409,000 for finishing third in the $150K Triton NLH 8-Handed at WSOP Paradise in 2025.
Seat 7: Nick Schulman
- Tournament winnings: $25,476,414
- WSOP bracelets: 7
- Chips: 710,000
Nick Schulman busted early on Day 1 of the Super High Roller Bowl but made the wise decision to max late-reg on Day 2. He spun his 15 big blinds up, and although he was one of the short stacks in the final nine, he clung on to make the final table.
Schulman needs little introduction. The seven-time WSOP bracelet winner was inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame in his first eligible year, nine months after he turned 40 in July 2025. His very first live cash came in 2005, when he won the WPT World Poker Finals for $2.2M. Amazingly, that’s still his biggest cash.
Schulman is still winning in 2026. He took down the $10K PGT Mixed Games 8-Game (Event 4) last week for $235,200 – enough to pay both buy-ins here and leave him with some spending money.
Super High Roller Bowl: Mixed Games final table
| Place | Player | Chips |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Robert Wells | 730,000 |
| 2 | Jared Bleznick |
1,380,000 |
| 3 | Tobias Leknes |
1,305,000 |
| 4 | Benny Glaser | 3,295,000 |
| 5 | Chad Eveslage |
600,000 |
| 6 | Yuri Dzivielevski |
3,380,000 |
| 7 | Nick Schulman |
710,000 |
Play resumes on Saturday, February 14, at 1pm PT. The PokerGO stream will start two hours later at 3pm PT, and you can watch that on YouTube. Meanwhile, you can watch all of the action from Day 2 below.