Dan Bilzerian Gamble

Images from Dan Bilzerian's Instagram account. According to a Buzzfeed article that has now been viewed over 2.4 million times Dan Bilzerian is 'the most interesting man on Instagram'. Describing himself as an ‘actor, astronaut and asshole’ in his profile he is in fact gambling entrepreneur and his lifestyle of excess has found an audience. Bet Cafrino Dan Bilzerian Las Vegas High-stakes gambler Dan Bilzerian was risking $600,000 on a Los Angeles-to-Las Vegas cycling bet, but now he could end up losing his private jet. Bilzerian and hedge fund manager Bill Perkins (also a poker player) agreed to the bet last month, which calls for Bilzerian to cycle roughly 300 miles to the iconic.

Internet personality and gambler Dan Bilzerian made the wrong gamble on UFC 246. Bilzerian bet on Cowboy Donald Cerrone, who was knocked out by Connor McGregor in just 40 seconds during the match at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Belzarian posted a photo on Instagram showing the piles of cash he bet on Cerrone to win.

A post shared by Dan Bilzerian (@danbilzerian) on

'Puttin some pocket change on [Cerrone],' Bilzerian, 39, wrote in the caption. 'Who y'all got?'

Bilzerian's photo showed him standing beside the piles of cash he bet on Cerrone to beat McGregor, with him holding up a bag of change.

After McGregor won, Bilzerian took the loss.

'Haha s—, [McGregor] keeps backing it up, much respect,' Balzerian added in the comments following the match.

It's not clear how much Bilzerian put on Cerrone to win, but it was speculated online he bet over $1 million based on Bilzerian's Instagram Story video. McGregor's fight against Cerrone lasted just 40 seconds. After the fight McGregor said he plans to spend time with his family before thinking about who he will face next.

'I'm going to have a look at a calendar and see where we're at,' he said at the post-match press conference. 'I'll be ready. I'll have a celebration tonight. I'll chill with my kids tomorrow. I'll show Junior the fight on the tele and see how he reacts. I'll see what he thinks of it. Then [I'm] back to training.'

Bilzerian has almost 30 million Instagram followers and is known for showing off his lavish lifestyle on social media. He has an estimated net worth of $200 million, so losing $1 million on a bet probably is not a big deal for him. Bilzerian, who openly supported President Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential election, told TMZ in November 2019 he might run for president when asked about Kanye West's plans to run.

'I think he's going to be running against me. We'll see,' Bilzerian said with a laugh.

The so-called 'King of Instagram' previously toyed with running in 2015, making appearances at nightclubs as part of his 'campaign.'

Bilzerian has often been at the center of controversies. In 2014, a video showed him throwing porn star Janice Griffith off a roof, and she broke her foot. Griffith sued Bilzerian and Hustler, but was Bilzerian's attorney said Hustler was at fault. Then, Hustler's attorney said it was not at fault and called the throw an 'act of God.'

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In October 2017, Bilzerian was at the Las Vegas shooting where 58 people were killed. He posted videos on Instagram, including one running from the scene and another claiming he was getting a gun and going back to the scene. In another video, he went back home, believing he could do nothing more. His actions that night caused online debate, with some calling him out for filming while running from the scene and others praising him for trying to help.

Photo credit: Prodip Guha/Getty Images

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  • »Dan Bilzerian Says He Won $54 Million From One Opponent

Updated on Feb. 9, 2020

Bilzerian loses $1 million in UFC bet, shoots Esfandiari and launches a new line of water

While we haven’t been able to confirm if Dan Bilzerianactually did win $54 million off of one poker player, but we have found out he lost a pretty decent chunk of change betting on MMA and shot Antonio Esfandiari in the chest.

That’s right, in a recent podcast by CardPlayer called “Poker Stories,” Esfandiari talks about a number of things including the time he let Bilzerian shoot him in the chest. Esfandiari is no stranger to wild bets, he previously beat Kevin Hartin a boxing match and famously won the inaugural Big One for One Drop for $18 million. It was the single largest No-limit Hold’em prize at the time.

That’s still only a fraction of the $54 million Bilzerian claims to have won off an unknown player though. He did publicly broadcast a seven-figure loss betting on MMA recently though.

Bilzerian posted a photo of himself with an estimated $1 million (and a few coins) at an unknown casino in Las Vegas. He was betting on Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone to take down Conor McGregor in UFC 246.

A post shared by Dan Bilzerian (@danbilzerian) on

It was one of the fastest ways to lose $1 million since McGregor knocked out Cerrone in just 40 seconds. That’s an estimated loss of $25,000 per second.

But if rumors of Bilzerian’s poker prowess are true, then the hit shouldn’t have hurt too much. In fact, Bilzerian joked about the loss on Twitter soon after:

Haha shit

— Dan Bilzerian (@DanBilzerian) January 19, 2020

Even if he doesn’t compensate for the loss with poker, Bilzerian launched a line of beverages called Ignite Beverages at the beginning of 2020. Their first drink will be loaded with electrolytes and minerals and the company is expected to release a cannabis-infused drink later this year.

To keep up with Bilzerian, just check out his Instagram. Check out the original story below.

Dan Bilzerian has laid claim to winning $54 million from one poker player despite the fact none of the high stakes poker community have every played against him or watched him play any meaningful sessions.

The controversial character, who is the self-proclaimed King of Instagram where he has an incredible 27.6 million followers, recently appeared on a British podcast called the True Geordie where he gave a candid interview about his life.

Bilzerian, now 38-years-old, hails from Tampa, Florida but resides in Las Vegas, Nevada. He is the son of corporate takeover specialist Paul Bilzerian who was forced to disgorge $62 million in 1994, has declared himself bankrupt on numerous occasions, served a 13-month prison sentence, and this year renounced his American citizenship in protest of his treatment by the U.S. Government.

Bilzerian Appears on the True Geordie Podcast

True Geordie quizzed Bilzerian from a lavish hotel room where Bilzerian spent the entire one-hour 23-minutes eating a variety of foods while candidly answering any questions pitted to him. Bilzerian loves talking about himself and revealed his love for women, answered questions about his sexual conquests, his time served in the military, and a brief set of questions about his apparent poker prowess.

It has long been believed that Bilzerian’s apparent riches and bottomless bankroll stemmed from a trust fund set up in his name by his father. Bilzerian poured cold water on these claims by revealing he allowed the trust fund rumors to run because he wanted rich businessmen, Hollywood celebrities and producers, and hedge fund managers to believe them and allow him to play ultra high stakes cash games against them.

Dan Bilzerian Gambler

Bilzerian: I pioneered the LAG style of play

Dan Bilzerian is an advocate for personal gun ownership

“I let people think that I had a big trust fund and that’s how I got all my money because that allowed me to get into those really good games,” said Bilzerian openly.

Dan Bilzerian Gambler

The playboy went on to state, “I didn’t try to be a grinder, I did my grinding in college, played online and all that shit, but I kind of moved on from that. For me, it was getting into games with celebrities, producers, and hedge fund guys. I didn’t want to be associated with poker players, didn’t want to hang out with them, not even be seen with them.”

These games, that nobody else in the poker community has ever heard of or had the opportunity to play in, is where Bilzerian made the first of two almost ridiculous claims. Bilzerian said, without batting an eyelid, that he was one of the first poker players in the world to play a loose-aggressive style of poker before adding that “I was one of the first people that pioneered” a LAG approach.

LAG players have existed almost as long as the game of poker itself. While a Tight-Aggressive (TAG) approach was adopted by large sections of the poker community for quite some time, poker legend Doyle Brunson highlighted the importance of being able to play LAG in his 1979 poker strategy bookSuper System.

Bilzerian Claims to have Won $54 Million From One Opponent

Bilzerian then went on to claim that a poker game in 2015 was his breakthrough moment and was when he got his hand on a gargantuan sum of cash that has allowed him to travel the world, living a playboy lifestyle surrounded by beautiful models.

I beat this one dude for $54 million and that was like my Scarface moment. We were taking in more money than we could spend, we had bags of cash, I was making money from gambling and sports betting, I had money coming in from every fu*king direction.”

It would be unfair to call Bilzerian a liar because only he knows the actual truth about that fateful cash game. It does seem like poppycock when you consider back in 2001, investment banker Andy Beal took on “The Corporation”, a team consisting of Chau Giang, the late Chip Reese, Doyle Brunson, Gus Hansen, Howard Lederer, Jen Harman,Phil Ivey, Ted Forrest, and Todd Brunson in a series of fixed-limit hold’em heads-up cash games with $10,000/$20,000 blinds, that increased to $100,000/$200,000 at one stage.

There were some huge wins and losses on both sides, with Ivey winning $16.6 million over the course of three days, prompting Beal to quit the challenge while down to the tune of $16 million. These were games played by elite players who pooled their gigantic bankrolls against Beal who has a net worth in the region of 9.2 billion. Despite his huge wealth, Beal quit when $16 million down, how much money do you need to soak up a $54 million loss? The games were written about in the Michael Craig book The Professor, The Banker and the Suicide King.

Bilzerian’s only recorded tournament cash came in the 2009 World Series of Poker Main Event where he finished 180th for $36,626, hardly the sum of money that one can parley into a $54 million haul.

The poker community is always going to have to deal with the likes of the misogynist Bilzerian laying claim to be part of it and showing the game in a negative light as a result. Thankfully, Bilzerian seems to be investing his $54 million “winnings” into his legalized cannabis venture and countless more money into living up to the image he portrays in his Instagram posts so we may never see him at the poker table again.