Mathew Cusson is a recreational player and a longtime fan of watching poker.
Jared 'Blez' Bleznick recently claimed he could be the best poker commentator the game has ever seen. At first, the claim sounds loud — even ridiculous. But if you’ve heard him in the booth, you know he might be right.
Blez brings something to poker commentary that’s been missing for a long time: feeling. He doesn’t just narrate hands — he taps into the heart of what makes poker compelling. The pain, the ego, the long hours, the sudden ecstasy, the familiar heartbreak.
In his interview with PokerOrg, Blez said, “I know what the people want.” That might sound cocky, but if you’ve spent any time watching poker in the last few years, it’s hard to argue. Too much of today’s commentary feels dry, safe, and stiff. It’s a math lecture. A constant stream of solver-speak and bet-sizing breakdowns, delivered like a baseball broadcast — mechanical and careful.
Fear of being wrong
Of course, the other side of that coin exists too. Someone like Ali Nejad is an excellent commentator in his own right and clearly plays the color commentator role in the duos he’s paired in.
But sometimes, his style leans more into narrative and entertainment than deep strategy. Where some commentators cling to the math, Ali tends to ride the narrative. It’s entertaining but often light on substance. He’ll lean into innuendo or try to rile up his partner, rather than speak to what’s really happening at the felt.
That’s where Blez separates himself. The way he talks about players being “in a spot” carries its own gravity. There’s no need for gimmicks. The weight of his words rooted in real experience is the color.
Commentators today are scared to be wrong. Scared to speculate. So instead of telling us what a player might be feeling, they retreat to what they know is safe: percentages, pot odds, and ICM pressure. And yes, all of that matters. But poker isn't just about math. It’s about people.
Nick Schulman is one of the best on the mic and a newly inducted member of the Poker Hall of Fame.
Hayley Hochstetler

Bleznick brings the swagger
Blez gets that. So does Nick Schulman, who’s carved out his own reputation as one of the best to ever do it. Both of them talk about poker like it matters — like it means something. Because to a lot of us, it does. To the grinders who’ve put in ten-hour days for ten years straight. To the tournament players who’ve busted 15 bullets in a row and still show up the next day. To anyone who’s sat in silence after a gut-wrenching cooler, wondering if they’ll ever climb out of the hole.
You can’t fake that kind of understanding. You have to live it. That’s why Blez works. He’s not polished. He’s not politically correct. He’s not always right. But he’s real and that counts for something.
So yeah, when he says he might be the best to ever do it, it’s not that crazy. He might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but he brings something the game desperately needs: perspective. Swagger. And above all, love for the game and the people who live it.
That’s what makes a great commentator. Not just knowing what happened, but knowing why it mattered.
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