Atlanta Hawks forward Kent Bazemore and his teammates have a special love for Uno, and even had a bonding experience from playing it together.

This summer Bazemore held his inaugural UNO Tournament for a charity fundraiser at Fernbank Museum.

The winner of the tournament would take home bragging rights and a gold championship belt produced by Mattel.

The belt is similar to one a WWE wrestler would wear, with metal Uno cards attached to it.

The event was a success, and an unusual winner took home the belt.

Gracie Weeks, an 11 year old managed to roll through about eight other adult opponents to win the game, and Bazemore's congratulations.

This was all apart of Bazemore's plan to build upon his three-year-old ARMS Foundation, which he spoke about when returning to Atlanta.

I’m a student athlete and graduated from college with two degrees (from Old Dominion). I played in two NCAA tournaments. … I want to install the blueprints for youth to be successful. At my basketball camps, we don’t have Most Valuable Camper. We have Best Teammate. We have Hardest Worker. We have Leader by Example. We have those types of awards because those are traits that can take kids far beyond just making a layup.

Better luck next time, but Bazemore wasn't a sore loser since he did in fact take a picture with Gracie while she held her belt with a smile.