PokerStars Names Gabi Campos As New Chief Executive Officer

According to a report from the gaming industry website eGaming Review, PokerStars has named former 888.com official Gabi Campos as the new Chief Executive Officer for the online poker operation.

Campos comes from leadership of the 888.com subsidiary Dragonfish, a business to business (B2B) arm of the company. Campos left that position last monthafter the fiscal reports of the company were revealed to stockholders, stated eGaming Review. From those reports, Campos was in a prime position to move to a larger company; 888’s fiscal numbers overall were down, but Campos’ Dragonfish provided approximately 20% of the revenues for 888 and increased the overall revenues of Dragonfish 33% in 2009 versus 2008.

Campos will step into the CEO slot at PokerStars on October 4th, but much of the original leadership of the company will remain the same. The founder of PokerStars, Isai Scheinberg, will remain as a major player in the organization as Chief Technical Officer. Scheinberg’s son, Mark, will take up the role as chairman of PokerStars.

eGaming Review reports that there was a special memo sent to the employees of PokerStars from Mark Scheinberg to ensure that there was a smooth transition in the company. eGaming Review published the memo, which stated, “Both Isai and myself will continue to be closely involved in the company’s strategic direction and building on the success we have all achieved together as a team over the last ten years. We are excited about this new chapter in the PokerStars story, and look forward to Gabi’s leadership in taking the company forward to continued success.”

What Campos’ exact position with the company will be is a bit of a mystery. As a privately owned company, there are no reports as to earnings from the market leader in the online poker industry. As such, there are no stockholders that a CEO would have to either push to buy more stock or shareholders that a CEO would have to soothe in lean times.  Campos’ place as the new CEO at PokerStars may come in the public relations area. The online poker site has never had a person identified as the leader of the company; thus, it has a difficult time with public relations with its players and, especially, in the media.

As reported by Poker News Daily yesterday, the exposure of a “bot ring” in operation on PokerStars has been a very hotly contested issue as of late. The popular poker forum Two Plus Two and the rankings site PokerTableRatings.com exposed the existence of a large segment of players (nearly 30) that allegedly were using bot programming on the site. In the Poker News Daily article, a spokesman stated that PokerStars was aware of the situation and only ejected the players from the site after the allegations were made public on Two Plus Two and correlated by PTR’s calculations. Having a face for the organization, such as a CEO would be, would have been helpful in alleviating customers fears in a very delicate area.

Since the passage of the Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act (UIGEA) in the United States in 2006, PokerStars has been virtually unchallenged because it still accepts players from the U. S., something that former leader PartyPoker and others weren’t able to do since they are publicly traded entities on various stock exchanges. Over the past four years, PokerStars has been able to build itself into a true behemoth in the online poker industry, leading second place Full Tilt Poker (another site still catering to U. S. players) by nearly a 2-1 margin in player numbers, according to PokerScout.com.  With his prior success at Dragonfish, Campos should be able to make PokerStars an even more impressive player in the online poker industry.




Read more >>

Wed, July 21st, 2010

Related Online Poker News:

Useful poker information:

  • LIVE BLIND - The last and largest blind bet may or may not be LIVE. If LIVE, the blind bettor has the option of "raising" his own blind in the event the bet is called around to him. This is normal, and is sometimes referred to as "blinds are live".
  • MIDDLE POSITION - Betting positions approximately halfway around the table from the first player to act.
  • S&M - Sklansky & Malmuth. Generally refers to the ideas and algorithms published by these two authors. When used in a 7-card stud context, often refers to "7 Card Stud For Advanced Players", and when used in a Hold'em context, often refers to "Texas Hold'em For Advanced Players".
  • ACTION - Money that is being bet. "NO ACTION" means a hand or game has few bettors and fewer raisers. "Gimme some action" is ostensibly a plea for calls and raises.
  • MAIN POT - The main pot, as related to one or more side pots, when there are one or more all-in player(s). The main pot is the one in which all active players participate.
  • SEAT POSITION - The actual seat a player has, normally numbered sequentially starting with 1 as the first seat to dealer's left. Not to be confused with POSITION in a particular pot. Typically unrelated to play of a hand but often important in peripheral aspects, e.g.: "Seats 1 and 10 are nonsmoking here", "Seat 5 has a good view of the table", "Seat 3 is in a high-traffic area".
July 2010
M T W T F S S
« Jun   Aug »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
Archives:
2010
Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2009
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2008
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2007
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2006
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2005
Dec   Nov   Oct   Jan  
Subscribe:
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to My Yahoo!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to Google!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to My MSN!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to Bloglines!

Search

to Top!
Copyright 2005 - 2010 © PokerNewsHub.com. The information at this site is for entertainment and news purposes only. Poker News Hub.com will not be held for any personal loss of wagers or damages you may incur. Please read the full disclaimer.
For any questions contact us.
Valid XHTML and CSS