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Anton Eshtokin, Chief Marketing Officer at Boomerang Partners: Winning Golden Boomerang Awards is a meaningful professional marker within the industry
1. GBA is entering its third season in 2026. Looking back at the journey from the very first edition in 2024 — how would you describe how the tournament has evolved?
Perhaps the most significant change is that the Golden Boomerang Awards has clearly moved beyond being just another industry competition and has become a recognized brand within the affiliate marketing space. Over the past three years, we have not only increased brand awareness but also earned trust and built a strong community of participants who return to compete and improve their results.
I can confidently say that today, even participation in the GBA is a mark of quality. Why? Because it reflects a certain level of professionalism in the market. Winning, especially in the third season, becomes a clear marker of being among the very best in the industry.
What makes this evolution important is that formats like this are still relatively rare. GBA sits at the intersection of competition, expertise, and industry recognition – and we see it as a platform that not only rewards performance, but also contributes to the overall development of the affiliate market.
2. In 2025, more than 400 affiliate teams participated. What does that number tell you about what the market is looking for from formats like GBA?
For us, this is a clear signal that the market is actively seeking formats that go beyond pure performance-based incentives. You see, traditional affiliate programs are heavily focused on financial rewards for traffic – and there’s plenty of that in the market already. The significant growth in the number of Golden Boomerang Awards participants from season to season (226 in the first, 400+ in the second) demonstrates that affiliate teams have a strong demand for something different. I’m talking about competition, visibility, and a sense of belonging to a professional community.
GBA taps into that by offering not just rewards, but recognition and experience. Through our collaboration with AC Milan (I remind you that Boomerang Partners is an Official Regional Partner of AC Milan), we’re able to provide participants with opportunities that go beyond monetary value – things that are difficult to replicate within standard affiliate program structures.
Ultimately, it’s about creating a sense of legacy. Participation in the Golden Boomerang Awards becomes part of a longer-term professional story, not just a short-term performance cycle.
3. The theme of this season is ‘Beyond the Moment.’ Where did that idea come from, and why does it feel right for this particular stage of GBA’s life?
The idea behind “Beyond the Moment” came naturally as we entered the GBA’s third season. After two successful years, it felt like the right time to shift the focus from short-term wins to long-term performance.
It’s no secret that the affiliate market is highly volatile. Here, strong results can come quickly, sometimes unexpectedly. But staying at the top is a completely different challenge.
In the third season of Golden Boomerang Awards, we’re focusing on what exists beyond the moment of victory. Winning is important, but it’s only a snapshot. What truly defines top-tier affiliate teams is the work behind them. These are consistent execution, strategic thinking, adaptability, and the ability to identify new opportunities.
Thus, “Beyond the Moment” is about recognizing that invisible layer of effort that separates sustainable success from a one-time result.
4. Five months is a long run for an affiliate tournament. Engagement typically drops in the middle of any long competition. What specific mechanisms did you build into GBA 2026 to prevent that?
You’re right to point out the tournament’s length and the importance of maintaining participant engagement over such a distance, but we deliberately set this challenge for ourselves. That’s why we paid close attention to developing a clear and effective structure for the Golden Boomerang Awards. In the third season, it’s a multi-stage experience rather than a single continuous race. The season is divided into three phases, conceptually aligned with a football match structure, each with its own rules, objectives, and rewards.
This creates natural reset points and new incentives throughout the tournament, helping maintain momentum.
We’ve also introduced mechanics such as boosts and mid-season entry opportunities. This allows new affiliate teams to join and still compete for top positions, rather than being locked out by early leaders.
Additionally, not all mechanics are revealed upfront. Rolling out new elements during the season adds anticipation and keeps participants engaged over time.
5. 2026 is an extraordinary year for sport — the FIFA World Cup, the Winter Olympics, one of the most packed global calendars in recent memory. How does that shift the opportunity and the pressure for sports-focused affiliates?
Yes, 2026 is an exceptionally busy year for sports (and this applies not only to the past Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026 and the upcoming FIFA World Cup 2026, but also to many other high-profile tournaments), which creates both opportunity and pressure.
On one hand, a packed global calendar means more traffic peaks and more chances to scale. On the other hand, it increases competition – both in media buying and in capturing audience attention.
Who can succeed in such conditions? – Those affiliate teams that don’t just react to a given sporting event, but instead focus more on preparation and strategy. This means understanding which moments matter, how to prioritize them, and how to allocate resources effectively.
That’s why we introduced a dedicated Sports Marketing and Betting Calendar 2026 earlier this year. Combined with participation in the Golden Boomerang Awards, it provides affiliate teams with a more structured approach to the sports season and to capitalize on key moments.
In this context, GBA acts as an additional performance layer – amplifying focus and execution during a highly competitive period.
6. In your view, what genuinely motivates a top-tier affiliate in 2026 — is it financial upside, status, access, something else? And how does GBA address that?
Top-tier affiliates in 2026 are driven by more than just financial upside, although revenue remains a fundamental factor.
For experienced teams, money alone is often not a sufficient long-term motivator. They are already operating at a level where access, recognition, and positioning within the industry become equally important.
This includes being part of a trusted network, gaining visibility, and accessing opportunities that are not typically available through standard affiliate programs.
That’s where the Golden Boomerang Awards are positioned differently. It’s not just about rewards – it’s about status, professional recognition, and belonging to a high-level community.
Combined with the competitive nature of the season, this creates a stronger and more sustainable layer of motivation.
7. TIME TO WIN closed on March 31. It was directly connected to GBA — participants earned bonus points carrying into the new season. How do you see that handoff working, and what did TIME TO WIN teach you going into GBA 2026?
TIME TO WIN and Golden Boomerang Awards are designed to function as part of a unified ecosystem rather than separate competitions.
TIME TO WIN acted as a high-intensity entry point into the year. It helped re-engage our affiliate partners after the holiday season and encouraged a more sprint-based approach to performance, where teams actively test tools and strategies.
GBA, which follows immediately after, shifts the focus to long-term consistency and sustained results.
The connection between the two tournaments is also structural: participants from TIME TO WIN carry bonus points into the Golden Boomerang Awards. This creates continuity and rewards early engagement.
Overall, our goal is to build a system where affiliate partners stay engaged throughout the year – not just for short-term wins, but as part of a long-term collaboration.
8. If GBA is still running five years from now and has become exactly what you want it to be — what does that look like?
We would like the Golden Boomerang Awards to become a widely recognized and trusted benchmark within the affiliate industry. Already, we have serious reasons to believe that this goal will be achieved. These include growing interest from affiliate teams and participant numbers, increased media attention, and deeper engagement from the market.
A key focus going forward is trust. That’s why GBA is positioned as a performance-driven award, based on transparent data, a clear leaderboard, and measurable results.
Success would mean that winning the Golden Boomerang Awards is not just an achievement for the winner, but a meaningful professional marker within the industry.
Rather than competing directly with traditional awards, we aim to strengthen our niche as a highly practical, performance-based competition.
9. What would you say to an affiliate who is sitting on the fence right now, wondering whether GBA 2026 is worth their time and attention?
It’s worth approaching that question from a practical perspective. We all know that the affiliate marketing space is highly competitive. Staying passive in it can hardly be called a winning strategy. By participating in the Golden Boomerang Awards 2026, affiliate teams gain a structured opportunity to test their capabilities in a visible, high-pressure environment.
At the same time, the benefits are clear for all participants. For experienced affiliates, it’s a way to benchmark themselves against strong competitors and gain recognition. For newer players, it’s an opportunity to accelerate learning and better understand what high-level performance looks like.
There’s also value in being part of a professional community – exchanging experience, observing others, and staying aligned with market dynamics.
So the real question becomes not “is it worth it?”, but “what do you miss by not participating?” – especially in a year with this level of competition and opportunity.
Europe
European Online Gambling Industry Faces Tough Offshore Choice
The slow death of grey markets in Europe and the increasingly clear line between regulated spaces and the black market is set to divide the entire industry in two, including suppliers.
With almost all major European markets having adopted or being well on their way to enacting a full licensing regime for online gambling, the battle lines between what is on- and off-shore are clearer than ever.
For those nations that persist with restrictions on some sectors, like the continued monopoly in Norway or France’s ban on online casinos, it’s becoming nearly impossible to justify doing business in spite of these prohibitions – even for suppliers.
Regulators in the rest of Europe increasingly expect their licensees to follow not just their rules, but those of their fellow authorities across the continent.
Where once expectations of good behaviour were reserved exclusively for operators, B2B companies are now subject to the same scrutiny.
For the past few years, there has been a general building of pressure on suppliers, but this year B2B compliance has moved from a growing trend to become the status quo for the sector.
Where do you stand?
The industry is being asked to pick a side and even to play the role of regulator itself, in some cases.
“We understand that at least one piece of recent B2B regulatory enforcement [in the UK] may have come as a result of a B2C operator effectively reporting one of its suppliers,” said Andy Danson, the head of Bird & Bird’s international gambling practice.
It’s becoming clear that a meaningful percentage of operators have fully bought into the idea that those who continue to exist in European black or grey are threats to their bottom line.
Speaking on a recent webinar organised by his firm, Danson added: “There is an increasing use of commercial pressure and accountability alongside regulatory enforcement, and there is this growing expectation that licensed businesses consider who they support.”
Danson notes that, in his view, the burden on operators to self-police their industry is probably becoming too large.
“How much can a regulator really expect B2C licensees to regulate their suppliers? It is ultimately the regulator’s job to do that, and B2C really should be able to rely on their suppliers having a local license.”
This backwards pressure is also being exerted on suppliers in jurisdictions where they are required to obtain their own licenses.
Regulators expect suppliers not to sell their content to operators who service their local black market and look dimly on supplying companies active in illegal markets in any part of the world.
Gone are the days when these authorities would accept the excuse that aggregators are ultimately responsible for providing game content to these offshore operators. Instead, suppliers risk enforcement if they do not have oversight of the entire supply chain their products exist in.
Dealmakers
This pressure coming in from every angle leads to only one inevitable conclusion: M&A activity.
As suppliers are forced to choose either to abandon their high profit margin offshore clients or their reliable onshore customers, the possibility of dividing into two parts becomes more and more compelling.
“I think businesses will very likely look to separate and restructure, particularly where they currently have a real mix of regulated and unregulated market activities,” said Danson.
“We certainly saw similar trends five to ten years ago when the regulatory focus on this sort of issue was more on the B2B side,” he added.
This move would be driven partly by modern regulatory complexities, but also the impact of US investors entering the gambling market more prominently over the past five years.
US-based capital tends to be more skittish about any activity with uncertain regulatory backing and its law enforcement authorities are not shy about exerting their authority extraterritorially.
“International market exposure is becoming more and more relevant in an investment and M&A context,” Danson confirmed.
A dilemma
Those gambling businesses choosing the regulated environment are at least finding their authorities more willing than in previous years to take proactive action against the black market.
In the UK, the Gambling Commission has received a grant of £26m from the government to step up its work against illegal online gambling, for example.
Regulators are also understood to be sharing more information than ever before about the main bad actors afflicting their markets, through organizations like the Gambling Regulators Europe Forum (GREF).
Although it’s worth noting that officials also say they are swapping notes on the activities of their licence-holders as well, in yet a further example of international compliance becoming a local issue.
This, along with an atmosphere of zero compromise when it comes to tightening regulations, has created a situation where the choice between on- and off-shore is not a simple one.
Andy Danson summed up the problem: “By creating an environment which has become so burdensome and challenging for regulated markets to operate, and then challenging operators and suppliers to pick a side, regulators perhaps shouldn’t be all that surprised when some operators out there might not necessarily choose the side that they want them to.”
The post European Online Gambling Industry Faces Tough Offshore Choice appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Brazil
EGB Group launches institutional portal to strengthen corporate presence in iGaming in Brazil
EGB Group (Esportes Gaming Brasil), owner of Esportes da Sorte, Onabet and Lottu, has launched its new institutional portal, bringing governance, strategy and corporate operations together in a single digital environment.
The initiative aims to structure the group’s institutional presence and increase transparency across its processes, operational pillars and expansion projects.
The portal features dedicated sections such as Compliance, ESG, Ecosystem and a fully structured Press Room, improving access for partners, media and regulatory authorities to compliance information and strategic initiatives.
According to Iury Tavares, Media Relations Manager at EGB Group, the launch reflects an already consolidated internal evolution.
“The launch of our institutional website materializes EGB Group as an ecosystem.
We are no longer seen only as isolated consumer brands, but as an integrated structure with different business fronts connected by a common purpose of innovation and market leadership.”
Camyla Lima, Branding and Creative Manager, added that the new platform also improves how this structure is communicated.
“The new corporate identity balances the energy of entertainment with the rigor of a structured operation.
We developed an interface that prioritizes institutional storytelling and ecosystem navigation, making it easier to understand how the brands are integrated.”
The more sober visual identity reinforces the group’s institutional positioning in a regulated market and reflects its organizational culture, recognized by its Great Place to Work certification and a workforce of around 1,000 direct and indirect jobs.
With employees placed at the center of the communication strategy, the launch was also supported by internal activations across offices in São Paulo and Recife and corporate channels.
Beyond governance, the portal highlights the group’s broader social impact initiatives.
It showcases support for street carnival blocks and official sponsorships of major Carnival celebrations across Brazil, including traditional hubs such as Recife and Olinda.
Social responsibility projects such as Costura Cidadã, support for waste pickers during major events, and partnerships with NGOs focused on river cleaning are also featured.
In sports, the group maintains sponsorships with clubs including Corinthians, Náutico, Ferroviária and Ceará, as well as support for inclusive sports initiatives.
A key highlight of the portal is the company’s investment in Brazilian technology development that underpins its operations.
The group details its use of proprietary platforms to ensure technical autonomy and compliance with requirements set by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting (SPA/MF).
This structure also includes the use of artificial intelligence for personalization and security, contributing to formal job creation and revenue generation across digital advertising and sports-related sectors.
Esportes Gaming Brasil
Esportes Gaming Brasil is one of the leading betting groups in the country, operating under a fully Brazilian structure with an official licence granted by the Ministry of Finance through SPA/MF. The authorisation covers its three brands: Esportes da Sorte, Onabet and Lottu, with nationwide operations across Brazil.
A benchmark in innovation and a strong advocate of market regulation, the group is committed to responsible gaming and continuous investment in user protection technologies, while generating hundreds of jobs.
Beyond sports betting, Esportes Gaming Brasil invests consistently in sports, culture and social projects. It is a master sponsor of clubs such as Corinthians, Ceará, Ferroviária and Náutico, and supports major cultural initiatives.
This include Galo da Madrugada and Carnival celebrations across Recife, Olinda, Salvador, Maceió, Natal, Caicó, Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, as well as the Parintins Festival. The brand also expands its digital presence through creative campaigns and influencer partnerships, strengthening its connection with audiences across online platforms.
The post EGB Group launches institutional portal to strengthen corporate presence in iGaming in Brazil appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
2026 FIFA World Cup
Media Troopers brings its sports betting expertise to Peru ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup
Media Troopers, the leading digital and customer acquisition group, has announced it will enter Peru’s regulated market to offer its sports betting and prediction market services ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will be played from 11 June to 19 July across the US, Canada, and Mexico, is a defining moment for the global online wagering industry, and one that Media Troopers aims to help operators capitalize on.
Peru is one of LatAm’s newest regulated markets, launching in 2024.
It’s home to more than 60 online operators, with its gaming regulator having granted 120 licenses since the launch.
In 2024, Peru’s regulated market was valued at $2.7 billion, with analysts expecting projected growth to reach $7.6 billion by 2033.
Media Troopers CEO Shmulik Segal says that Peru’s current regulated market represents the early stages of regulated sports betting in the US, noting that it currently boasts strong consumer demand and rapid operator expansion.
“Media Troopers is bringing mature-market expertise into Peru at precisely the moment the market is ready to scale,” Segal said.
By entering Peru, Media Troopers can offer its wide range of marketing and acquisition tools to operators in the region.
That includes providing operators with soccer-focused marketing channels, access to a variety of existing publishers and affiliates, and localized features that help operators scale their platforms to reach a more tailored audience, increase engagement, and build a trusting brand presence in the area.
Media Troopers has positioned itself as the gateway between exporting North American betting infrastructure into new, emerging markets, as it prepares for the next evolution of online wagering.
MediaTroopers was founded in 2019 with the vision of providing legal, safe, and responsible gambling alternatives to sports bettors and casino players.
Since then, the company has grown to operate in over 40 jurisdictions across North America.
MediaTroopers leverages decades of digital marketing experience, extensive in-house media buying knowledge, mobile advertising expertise, a robust technical infrastructure, and an extensive network of in-house and affiliated publishers to acquire paying customers for the world’s top gambling operators, including BetMGM, Caesars, DraftKings, FanDuel, BetRivers and more.
The post Media Troopers brings its sports betting expertise to Peru ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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