ENTERTAINING WEEKEND READING FOR ONLINE GAMBLERS
4 July 2008
Two interesting industry stories
There was some good weekend reading available for
followers of the industry as InfoPowa went to press
Saturday - a long article on Calvin Ayre and Bodog in
the latest edition of Fast Company magazine, and a
video-streamed interview with poker pro Annie Duke on
the UltimateBet.com online poker scandal that continues
to reverberate around both mainstream and industry
media.
Writer Josh Dean "was dragged to Macau" to interview
Bodog founder Calvin Ayre for an article on the
international gambling group for New York-based Fast
Company magazine, and he has come up with some
interesting insights into not only the personal approach
to life of the controversial Ayre, but also company
statistics, marketing and branding practices and
milestone events in the business that have impacted not
only Bodog, but the industry in general.
Here's a small taster: "Last year, the company claims,
Bodog processed $12 billion in wagers and drew revenue
of $320 million. Forty percent of the business was
casino games; 30% poker; 20% sports betting; and 10% the
various entertainment properties. As of March of this
year, a company rep told me, Bodog employed several
hundred people, including 15 bookmakers, at its Antigua
headquarters (where it relocated in 2006), plus a few
dozen in the U.K. and between 100 and 300 in Vancouver.
The Ayre I met in Macau was feeling bullish. "I sell to
people like me, who like what I like," he told me. "If I
like it, there's a whole bunch of other people out there
who like it too."
One glaring ommission in the article is the widely
publicised patent tribulations Bodog has suffered with
Dr. Scott Lewis's First Technology LLC company, which
saw the Bodog domains confiscated, a $48 million default
judgement against the company and some astonishingly
insulting blog comments from Ayre. Perhaps this was not
regarded as sufficiently important to bring to the
attention of the writer.
Readers can access the full article here:
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/127/last-call.html?page=0,0
The cheating scandals surrounding online poker sites
UltimateBet.com and its sister Absolute Poker.com (see
previous InfoPowa reports) continue to make waves in
both the mainstream and industry media and in the player
community, and the latest element in what seems to be a
concerted damage control initiative by the owners is a
Poker News video-streamed interview with the much
respected poker pro Annie Duke.
This can be accessed here:
http://www.pokernews.com/news/2008/0...et-scandal.htm
Duke has a long association with UltimateBet and has
been involved in both operational and branding
endorsement for the website. Apparently last fall she
was disenchanted with the way things were going and was
thinking about distancing herself from the enterprise.
In January this year, the 'hole card' scandal broke and
apparently the change of management that occurred
convinced Duke to revise her position in a move that was
"a big 180 for me."
The cause of this epiphany was apparently the
transparency of the new management, headed by CEO Paul
Leggett; the way in which it handled the crisis (paying
out an unspecified but claimed "seven figures" to
affected players); getting rid of the "bad apples"
responsible for the scandal and a bigger say for Duke in
the conduct of the business.
Judging by her comments in the interview Duke is now
firmly on board and confident that the historical
problems have been fully addressed, although management
is still considering the pursuit of those responsible.
This is apparently problematical due to legal
considerations around identifying the culprits and under
which jurisdiction to pursue them.
Duke follows the company line in claiming that company
revenues were not affected by the crisis, which is
surprising when one considers the magnitude of the
cheating and the editorial coverage it received. The
company strategy of recruiting big poker names to
endorse the website is also apparent in her comments.
Listening to the interview, there are confusing
references to both 'change of management' and 'change of
ownership'. This gives little clarity on who owned
Absolute/Ultimate Bet prior to its acquisition by
Tokwiro Enterprises, a Kahnawake registered company
owned by former Mohawk grand chief Joe Norton, or what
Tokwiro paid for the companies and when.
The UltimateBet story is not about to fade away. In her
interview Duke confirmed information circulating for
some months in the industry that the mainstream
television investigative program "60 Minutes" is about
to air the scandals. Producers for the program contacted
Duke whilst she was at the ongoing World Series of
Poker, although she does not amplify what was discussed.
Subjectively speaking, we had the impression that this
was a continuation of the damage control initiative
which the "new management" has been so vigorously
pursuing, suggesting that the impact of the cheating
scandal may have been bigger than UB would like to
acknowledge. The role of the major poker forums in
driving the resolution of these scandals also appeared
to be underplayed, whilst the proposition that bashing
UB was not good for the industry is arguable.
That said, the potential for harm to the industry's
credibility that an adverse "60 Minutes" take on the
affair is likely to have is a legitimate concern. What a
pity that the systems at UB/AP failed in the first
place, bringing about this crisis.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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