“ALEX STUPAK IS THE FINAL BOSS OF THE SEASON.” — Looking back at the entire 24 in 24: Last Chef Standing finale, no one intimidated their opponents more than Alex Stupak. He won the speed challenge, earned the Golden Knife, and displayed a fearsome calculation ability throughout the final night. Even champion Lee Anne Wong had to admit: “HE’S LIKE A MACHINE.” But sometimes the difference between champion and runner-up is just a small detail. After nearly 24 hours of almost perfect competition, Alex made a mistake at the most crucial moment. And that mistake caused the man considered the “Final Boss” of the season to lose the championship by a hair’s breadth, ending his journey with a heartbreaking runner-up position.

If Lee Anne Wong delivered the most emotional story of the 24 in 24: Last Chef Standing finale, then Alex Stupak was unquestionably its most terrifying competitor.

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In fact, many viewers left the finale believing that Alex played the strongest overall game of the night—even though he ultimately fell just short of the championship.

Throughout the final episodes, Alex looked less like a contestant and more like a machine.

He won the Speed Challenge.

He secured the coveted Golden Knife.

He repeatedly found himself near the top of the leaderboard.

And at multiple points, it felt as though the competition was his to lose.

Several chefs openly acknowledged how difficult he was to compete against.

Even Lee Anne Wong, who would eventually win the season, reportedly described him in remarkably simple terms:

“He’s like a robot.”

Meet the Cast of '24 in 24: Last Chef Standing' Season 3 - Parade

It was not meant as an insult.

It was a compliment.

Alex’s consistency throughout the competition was almost frightening.

While other chefs experienced ups and downs, Alex seemed capable of producing elite-level food challenge after challenge with very little drop-off.

That consistency became especially important when he earned one of the most powerful advantages of the season: the Golden Knife.

The prize gave him significant strategic control over the competition.

Most notably, it allowed him to influence who would be forced into a critical double-elimination challenge.

What happened next became one of the biggest strategic moments of the entire season.

Alex chose to send:

  • Viet Pham
  • Joe Sasto
  • Lee Anne Wong

into the dangerous elimination round.

Meanwhile, he allowed Christina Miros to avoid the challenge.

The decision immediately sparked discussion among viewers.

The logic seemed obvious.

Alex appeared to believe Christina represented the least dangerous remaining competitor.

If true, the strategy was brutally pragmatic.

Rather than eliminating the strongest possible rival immediately, Alex positioned himself to potentially face an opponent he believed would be easier to defeat later.

It was a cold calculation.

But it was also the kind of strategic thinking that often wins competitions.

Many fans praised the move as one of the smartest decisions made all season.

Others argued it demonstrated exactly why Alex was so difficult to beat.

He wasn’t simply cooking.

He was constantly playing the game.

Yet despite all of his strategic brilliance and culinary dominance, the moment many viewers remember most from the finale wasn’t about tactics at all.

It was about food.

Specifically, Alex’s pork Milanese.

The dish became one of the most celebrated plates of the entire finale after receiving an unforgettable reaction from judge Alex Guarnaschelli.

After tasting the dish, she delivered what may have been the most quoted line of the night.

“I want to eat this by myself. Without utensils. Maybe without clothes.”

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The comment immediately became a fan favorite.

Partly because it was hilarious.

Partly because it perfectly captured just how much the judges loved the dish.

In the world of cooking competitions, there are compliments.

And then there are compliments that become legendary.

This was clearly the latter.

The quote spread rapidly online as viewers celebrated both the humor and the sincerity behind it.

For many fans, it represented the strongest single compliment delivered during the entire finale.

Which makes Alex Stupak’s defeat all the more remarkable.

24 in 24: Last Chef Standing Shift 3: Resourcefulness @empellon  @empellonalpastor @foodnetwork #24in24

He had the strategy.

He had the momentum.

He had the challenge wins.

He had some of the most praised food of the season.

And yet he still lost.

Not because he failed.

But because Lee Anne Wong happened to produce the perfect finale at exactly the right moment.

In another season, Alex Stupak’s performance might have been remembered as one of the most dominant victories in Food Network history.

Instead, it will likely be remembered as something else:

The season’s final boss.

The chef everyone feared.

The culinary machine who seemed unbeatable.

And the last obstacle standing between Lee Anne Wong and the ending twenty years in the making.