词条 | Andrew Black (gambling entrepreneur) |
释义 |
| name = Andrew Black | image = | alt = | caption = | birthname = Andrew Wilson Black | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1963|5|13}} | birth_place = Carshalton, London, England | nationality = | education = King's College School | alma_mater = University of Exeter (dropped out) | net_worth = {{increase}} >£200 million (2016) | spouse = Jane | children = 4 | residence = | occupation = Co-founder of betfair | relatives = Cyril Black }} Andrew Black (born 13 May 1963) is a British entrepreneur who, together with Edward Wray, founded Betfair, the world's first and largest bet exchange. He is now a noted angel investor in technology businesses in the UK and further afield, and is a keen race horse owner and professional bridge player. He has won many awards, most notably Ernst & Young emerging entrepreneur of the year in 2002 (shared with Wray).[1] Early lifeBlack was born on 13 May 1963, the son of a property developer and grandson of Tory MP for Wimbledon Sir Cyril Black, who campaigned, among other things, against gambling.[2] He attended King's College School in Wimbledon where he excelled at maths (according to a moneyweek profile in 2009, not citable due to an entry in Wikipedia's blacklist) and then attended the University of Exeter but was asked to leave during his second year, saying later that he had spent most of his time at the bookies rather than attending lectures. CareerBlack took a succession of unskilled positions after dropping out of university but when his younger brother, Kevin, contracted a debilitating brain infection at the age of 19 Black gave up work to look after him until his death aged 21.[3] Black then worked in the City of London for a derivatives business, but during this time was becoming increasingly successful as a gambler, eventually earning sufficient money in winnings to give up work and concentrate on gambling full-time for a while. After initial success, full-time gambling looked unlikely to provide sufficient financial support for Black, who was newly married, so he set up a software business. The business won an on-site contract at GCHQ which involved being 'locked out of the office' every day at 5.00 pm, giving him long evenings during which to refine his ideas for a bet exchange. He became friends with Wray through playing bridge together[4] and showed him a prototype he had programmed which succeeded in securing Wray's interest and investment. BetfairBlack and Wray launched Betfair in 2000, having secured £1m of investment from friends and family, having had requests for venture investment rejected by VC funds that they had approached. Other bet exchanges launched at the same time, but worked on the basis of offering single bets which interested punters would then accept individually. Betfair operated on a model more similar to a financial exchange, allowing among other things, multiple small bets to fill a position offered by a gambler wishing to place a large stake on a wager. This approach, combined with the acquisition of rival Flutter in 2001, secured Betfair 90% of the bet exchange market in the UK within a few years of launch. In 2010 Betfair was floated on the London Stock Exchange[5] at a £13 share price which valued it at £1.4bn, making Black's 15% stake worth approximately £200m. Black is known to have retained much of his stake, benefiting from the share price's subsequent climb to £44 before Betfair was delisted when it was merged with Paddy Power in 2016.[6] Post-Betfair activitiesOn 3 August 2009 Black announced that he was going into partnership with Michael Owen with regard to Owen's Manor House Stables; Tom Dascombe has been hired as trainer and the stated ambition is to own and train Group 1 horses on the Flat.[7] Black is the joint owner of racehorse Brown Panther who won the Goodwood Cup in 2013. In 2014 Brown Panther won the Irish St. Leger by six lengths.[8] InvestmentsBlack's known investments include a significant stake in Hydrodec Plc where he has acted as a non-executive director and whose UK operations he acquired[9] in 2016; ownership of Morelands Riverdale,[10] a science park being built at Hampton, Surrey; a 30% stake in golfbidder.com[11] and a portfolio of early stage life sciences, gambling, sports and ecommerce business. BlogBlack has his own horseracing blog "Bert's Blog" where he discusses his bloodstock operations.[12] The blog also features interviews with former Betfair staff such as Tony Clare, Steve High and Martin Cruddace. References1. ^http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/EoY_-_London_and_South_award_recipients/$FILE/EY_EOY_London_and_South_award_recipients.pdf {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Black, Andrew}}2. ^Startups.co.uk: Andrew Black. Retrieved 13 November 2013 3. ^https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/2916471/The-gambler-who-bet-on-himself.html 4. ^https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/2916471/The-gambler-who-bet-on-himself.html 5. ^https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandconsumer/leisure/8081984/Betfair-shares-get-strong-start-in-boost-to-IPO-market.html 6. ^http://www.racingpost.com/news/horse-racing/betfair-and-paddy-power-merger-set-for-february/2018724/#newsArchiveTabs=last7DaysNews 7. ^http://www.racingpost.com/news/horse-racing/owen-promotions-limited-andrew-black-tom-dascombe-dascombe-and-black-join-forces-with-michael-owen/616167/latest/ Retrieved 13 November 2013 8. ^https://www.bbc.com/sport/0/horse-racing/29199662 9. ^http://www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/news/AN_1457345722867832400/hydrodec-sells-loss-making-uk-operations-to-director-andrew-black.aspx 10. ^http://www.morelands-riverdale.com/about/ 11. ^http://www.bertsblog.co.uk/horse-racing/hard-earned.html 12. ^http://www.bertsblog.co.uk/ 7 : 1963 births|Living people|Angel investors|People educated at King's College School, London|English businesspeople|British technology company founders|Gambling in the United Kingdom |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。