Zdorovetskiy spent five days imprisoned in Egypt after his arrest for climbing the pyramids and, in 2016, was arrested for climbing the letter “D” on Los Angeles’ iconic Hollywood sign. A New York Post story detailed his arrest in April 2020 for assault on a female in Miami Beach. Zdorovetskiy has run onto the field himself during World Series and World Cup games, in addition to several run-ins with the law. He appears to have been the latest pawn in a series of stunts masterminded by Russian YouTube star Vitaly Zdorovetskiy, a shameless porn dabbler and self-promoter. The Boca Raton native was charged with misdemeanor trespassing following the incident. He was then pummeled – officially, he was secured and detained – and led away. He made a nice cut-back move to elude his would-be captors at the 37-yard line, set his sights on the end zone and scampered down to the 1-yard line where, inexplicably, he executed a baseball slide and avoided the end zone. The “Florida man” who ran on the field was identified as Yuri Andrade, 31.ĭespite the questionable judgment in accepting the challenge to perform his stunt, Andrade showed some agility. So you’re saying there’s a chance that there may have been action? Maybe a syndicate all betting lower limits at once?” In a later tweet, Everson quoted the source as saying, “IF this dude was able to get down $50K, I highly doubt it was one bet. “We aren't looking to make much money off of them, but we definitely don't want to lose a ton and open ourselves up for any type of shadiness.” Can't speak for any other book, but there is a reason our novelty props have limits from $10 to $100. Say a book was dumb enough to post $1K limits on this. But even still, that would be a ton of bets/bettors. “No book in their right mind would take $50K limits on that,” Everson’s spokesperson is quoted as saying via Everson’s tweet thread. Patrick Everson, a senior writer for Las Vegas-based, seemed to have a good grip on the sports-betting aspect of the late-game antics.Įverson wrote, in part: “A lot of hullaballoo today about the #SuperBowl streaker purportedly making a $50K bet at +750 that there would be a streaker during the game.”Ībsent any proof to this point, it appears unlikely the gentleman on the field would have been able to make such a bet.Įverson cited a “global-market sportsbook spokesperson” as debunking the idea largely because of the amount rumored to have been wagered. Kevin Harlan's call of the idiot on the field (w/video from : /iAI7WDi5xxĪ restless social media community launched a discussion about “a streaker” being among the myriad Super Bowl prop bets available.Ī day later, it was clear the fan’s sprint was not a spur-of-the-moment idea – and there probably was not any legitimate bookmaking company on the hook for the payout.įirst, the idea of a potential wager then, who was behind the stunt.
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