San Francisco Chronicle

E-sports team wins billionair­es’ backing

Young gamer runs team of ‘Overwatch’ competitor­s

- By Christophe­r Palmeri

Noah Whinston is a young man on the go. The 23-year-old college dropout has raised tens of millions of dollars, from investors such as former junk bond king Mike Milken and billionair­e Phil Anschutz’s AEG, to be among the first team owners in a new internatio­nal video game league.

The Los Angeles Valiant will start competing next month in the inaugural year of Activision Blizzard’s “Overwatch” league. Whinston and his backers paid the video game giant $20 million for their franchise rights, aiming to get in on the ground floor of what could be the next big profession­al sport.

Video game competitio­ns have been around since the 1970s. What’s different now is that young people are spending less time watching traditiona­l sports like football and basketball and more time glued to game consoles and tablets. Companies like Activision see live events and broadcasts of their games as a natural extension of their business and are tapping big names in media, finance and sports to participat­e.

Activision, based in Santa Monica, has raised $240 million selling franchises for the “Overwatch” league, in which players compete in a cartoon-like shooting game that’s a little more than a year old. Last week, Riot Games, part of Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings, announced 10 franchises for its newly revamped North American “League of Legends” championsh­ip series. Prices started at $10 million.

“Everybody is looking at an audience base that is 300 million people and saying there has to be a way to harness the commercial part of this,” said Bruce Stein, a former Mattel executive whose company acquired the rights to a “League of Legends” team. “We see this as a sea change in the way people interact with content,” said Stein, whose company attracted investment­s from Disney

and from basketball great Magic Johnson.

The change is dizzying for the older hands. Last month, Jason Lake sold a majority stake in his 14-year-old CompLexity Gaming to Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and investor John Goff for an undisclose­d sum. Lake said he always operated on a breakeven basis, but competing in a world of $20 million franchise fees and dedicated training facilities required outside capital. Players who used be paid $2,500 a month are being lured to other teams for 10 times that salary, according to Lake. “We were becoming a farm team,” he said.

Whinston grew up in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, where his father was an economics professor and his mother taught political science at Northweste­rn. Whinston played online poker for money in high school and built a business selling Magic: The Gathering trading cards. He later discovered a site called Vulcun, where fans could build e-sports teams and win money, much like in fantasy sports. Soon Whinston’s name was popping up at the top of leader boards.

Amid questions about the legality of such betting, Vulcun shut down, but not before Whinston was introduced to Los Angeles venture capitalist Clinton Foy. The two bought an existing esports business, Team 8, and renamed it the Immortals, bringing in investors including Peter Levin, an executive at Lions Gate Entertainm­ent, and a venture capital fund affiliated with the rock band Linkin Park. Foy said he had to sign leases on property for the Immortals because no landlords would rent to the boyish CEO.

Noah’s father, Michael Whinston, who now teaches at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, said he and his wife tried to talk their son out of leaving school. The senior Whinston now feels his son was right. “I’m an economist,” he said. “He passed the market test.”

The Immortals now fields teams playing four games, including “Dota 2” and “Super Smash Bros.” The company failed to win a “League of Legends” franchise, despite having a team in a prior version of the league and seeming like a shoo-in to everyone in the industry. “I won’t lie,” Whinston said in a video to his fans. “I’m disappoint­ed, even a little heartbroke­n, in not being able to participat­e.”

In an online chat, Riot Games e-sports executive Chris Hopper declined to discuss why some teams didn’t make the cut, calling the decision “really difficult.”

E-sports competitio­ns generate money from ticket sales, corporate sponsorshi­ps and team merchandis­e. The Immortals’ sponsors come from the video game world: HP Inc., chair maker LF Gaming and Bloody Gaming, which sells mice and other accessorie­s. Stein’s Team Liquid has 12 sponsors, including Monster Beverage, listed on its website.

Whinston’s company houses its two dozen pros in an apartment building in the seaside community of Marina del Rey. Players practice from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the team facility in the nearby former movie studio enclave of Culver City. They scrimmage and in some cases play other teams in a handful of garage-like pods. Lunch and dinner are provided. Physical therapists and sports psychologi­sts are on call.

The 20,000-squarefoot property is among the first stand-alone training facilities for e-sports. Previously, players lived and practiced in houses rented by the company. Whinston lived in one with nine other people. “I lasted 18 months,” he said. When the new “Overwatch” season starts, teams will compete in a Burbank theater leased by Activision.

Whinston said his approach to picking teams involves a mix of data and human dynamics. Eight of his 11 “Overwatch” players are younger than 20, green even by e-sports standards. Seb Barton, a British native who goes by the name Numlocked, is an elder statesman at 24. He’s an important part of the team, Whinston said, because his effusive personalit­y rallies others when they’re not performing well.

“We’re not looking to go out there, sign the biggest-name free agents, and just try to throw them in a room and hope it all works out,” Whinston said. “We’re not the New York Yankees of e-sports. We’re not trying to be.”

 ?? Photos by Troy Harvey / Bloomberg ?? Members of the Immortals attend a meeting at their training center, the first such stand-alone facility for e-sports. They will compete in an “Overwatch” league run by Activision Blizzard of Santa Monica.
Photos by Troy Harvey / Bloomberg Members of the Immortals attend a meeting at their training center, the first such stand-alone facility for e-sports. They will compete in an “Overwatch” league run by Activision Blizzard of Santa Monica.
 ?? Troy Harvey / Bloomberg ?? Logos of the Immortals competitiv­e video game team are imprinted on the backs of their gaming chairs.
Troy Harvey / Bloomberg Logos of the Immortals competitiv­e video game team are imprinted on the backs of their gaming chairs.
 ?? Activision Blizzard ?? The new league will hold competitio­ns in “Overwatch,” a shooting game that’s just over a year old.
Activision Blizzard The new league will hold competitio­ns in “Overwatch,” a shooting game that’s just over a year old.
 ?? Troy Harvey / Bloomberg ?? Noah Whinston is CEO of the Immortals team, which is training near Los Angeles.
Troy Harvey / Bloomberg Noah Whinston is CEO of the Immortals team, which is training near Los Angeles.

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