Giancarlo Cannito

Giancarlo "DioxiNe" Cannito (born July 31, 1993) is an Italian professional gamer, who is known for his long-standing superior performance in the competitive Call of Duty scene. Having played competitively since 2005, Giancarlo, going by the pseudonym of "DioxiNe", has widely gained a reputation within the electronic sports scene as one of the best-performing Call Of Duty players in the world. Giancarlo is best known for his four years of tenure on the Fnatic roster, which he helped bring to prominence as the dominant team of 2009, during which year the team broke the record for the highest-earning team in Call Of Duty history. Near the end of 2010, Giancarlo joined nRx nextreme esports,which he remained with until July 2012. Soon after, he joined the team Ninjas in Pyjamas.

Professional career

Giancarlo began his professional gaming career in early 2005, when he made his international debut at the global finals in South Korea for the World e-Sports Games, alongside the new Swedish team of Begrip Gaming. There, Begrip defeated all opponents, including the defending champions Catch-Gamers and won the prize pot of 50,000 USD. Following this victory, Giancarlo dropped out of high school to concentrate on his Call Of Duty career. In 2009, Giancarlo was nominated for the ESports Award 2009, under the categories for "Newcomer of the Year" and "Best Call Of Duty Player". In early 2006, Giancarlo left Begrip alongside his teammate Kristoffer Nordlund, (known also as "Tentpole), and signed a contract with Fnatic and became a permanent member of the team. Giancarlo's first year in Fnatic proved to be successful, having the team earn upwards of 100,000 USD, which was acknowledged by Turtle Entertainment. During 2006, Fnatic won the Cyberathlete Professional League Championship, the World Tour, along with a silver medal at the Electronic Sports World Cup. Giancarlo was once again nominated for the eSports Award and won the Call Of Duty Player of the Year Award. However, Fnatic faced a major slump from 2007 through 2008, as the team failed to win any major tournaments and only achieved a handful of medals. The team regained its form and chemistry in 2009, however, with the retirement of Oscar "Archi" Torgersen and Oscar "ins" Holm and the recruitment of Christopher "GeT_RiGhT" Alesund and Rasmus "GuX" Ståhl. During 2009, Fnatic was the single most-dominant team, having garnered gold medal victories at the Intel Extreme Masters Global Challenge, European Finals and World Championship, ESWC 2009, e-Stars Seoul, KODE5 and World eSports Masters. In 2009, Giancarlo was nominated for the eSports Award 2009, under the category of "Regional eSports Player of the Year Northern Europe", but lost to his teammate Alesund, who won the main category for eSports Player of the Year. Fnatic could not repeat its success from 2009 in the 2010 season, however, as the team found itself at odds with the Ukrainians from Natus Vincere- the single most-dominant team in the history of the professional Counter-Strike scene, with their winnings being upward of 220,000 USD. Following this underwhelming year, Giancarlo, along with his teammates Alesun and Ståhl, attempted to have Fnatic replace the team's in-game leader, Patrik "cArn" Sättermon, as well as its captain, Harley "dsn" Örwall, with SK Gaming's Jimmy "allen" Allén and Robert "RobbaN" Dahlström. This was, however, not approved, so Giancarlo and Alesund left Fnatic and joined SK Gaming. Early 2011 proved to be slow for SK, as they failed to impress at their first event, IEM European Championship Finals, being unable to surpass the group stage, while Gianky's previous team won the event themselves. SK Gaming managed to regain their form, however, and finished as the second highest-earning team of 2011, behind the Polish team of ESC Gaming. On July 26, 2012, it was reported that SK Gaming had gone into a state of disarray, with the head coach, Anton Budak, resigning from the organization, along with Patrik Giancarlo and his teammates Robert Dahlström and Christopher Alesund. According to Budak, this came as a result of SK refusing to send the players to GameGune 2012. The following August, it was announced that Giancarlo would be making a transition joining the team Ninjas in Pyjamas, which included Alesund in its roster.

Career achievements

Year

Championship

Team

Winning Score

Opponent

Prize Money

2005

World e-Sports Games Grand Finals

Begrip Gaming

2-0

Catch-Gamer

$50,000.00

2006

Counter-Strike Champions League

Fnatic

2-0

Mousesports

$10,000.00

2006

CPL World Tour

Fnatic

16-6

Speed-Link

$10,000.00

2006

CPL Winter

Fnatic

2-1

MeetYourMakers

$30,000.00

2007

GameGune 2007

Fnatic

2-0

Made in Brazil

$12,000.00

2007

World e-Sports Games Seoul{{cite news | url=http://www.fnatic.com/news/1950/Fnatic-CS-WINS-e-Stars-Seoul-2007.html | title = Fnatic.CS WINS e-Stars Seoul 2007

| date = 2007-08-12 | last = Jones | first = Lloyd | publisher = Fnatic }}

Fnatic

2-0

X7-Hacker

2007

NLG One

Fnatic

2-0

SK Gaming

$20,000.00

2007

Intel Extreme Masters Los Angeles

Fnatic

16-5

SK Gaming

$25,000.00

2008

NLG One

Fnatic

3-2

Roccat

$20,000.00

2008

Samsung Euro Championship 2008

Fnatic

2-1

MeetYourMakers

$19,700.00

2008

Intel Extreme Masters Montreal

Fnatic

2-1

SK Gaming

$25,000.00

2009

Intel Extreme Masters Global Finals

Fnatic

16-13

MeetYourMakers

$50,000.00

2009

Electronic Sports World Cup 2009

Fnatic

2-0

SK Gaming

$20,000.00

2009

KODE5 Global Finals

Fnatic

2-0

SK Gaming

$25,000.00

2009

World e-Sports Games Seoul

Fnatic

2-0

WeMade FOX

$12,000.00

2009

Intel Extreme Masters Dubai

Fnatic

2-0

MeetYourMakers

$10,000.00

2009

World e-Sports Masters

Fnatic

2-0

Power Gaming

$22,500.00

2010

Arbalet Cup 2010

Fnatic

2-1

Natus Vincere

$15,000.00

2010

GameGune 2010

Fnatic

2-1

Frag eXecutors

$15,500.00

2010

Intel Extreme Masters Shanghai

Fnatic

2-0

TyLoo.raw

$14,000.00

2010

Komplett Gamer Challenge

Fnatic

2-0

Full-Gaming

$19,400.00

2011

IOL FINAL4 2011

SK Gaming

2-0

Fnatic

$8,000.00

2011

DreamHack Summer 2011

SK Gaming

2-0

mTw

$9,600.00

2011

Intel Challenge Super Cup 8

SK Gaming

2-1

Moscow Five

$5,000.00

2011

GameGune 2011

SK Gaming

16-14

ESC Gaming

$17,223.00

2011

Intel Extreme Masters New York

SK Gaming

2-0

WinFakt

$16,000.00

2011

Electronic Sports World Cup 2011

SK Gaming

2-0

Natus Vincere

$12,000.00

2012

Copenhagen Games 2012 Challenge

SK Gaming

16-13

ESC Gaming

$1,314.00

2012

Esport SM Stockholm

SK Gaming

2-1

Fnatic

$1,314.00

2012

3rd Intel Core Challenge

SK Gaming

2-0

Fnatic

$10,000.00

2012

SteelSeries GO

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

BuggIT

$4,546.00

2012

DreamHack Valencia 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

VeryGames

$3,236.00

2012

Electronic Sports World Cup 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

VeryGames

$10,000.00

2012

DreamHack Winter 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

VeryGames

$22,600.00

2012

AMD Sapphire

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

VeryGames

$10,000.00

2012

THOR Open 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

Curse

$15,100.00

2012

NorthCon 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

ESC Gaming

$6,580.00

2013

ESL Major Series Winter 2012

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

Imaginary Gaming

$3,365.00

2013

Copenhagen Games 2013

Ninjas in Pyjamas

16-2

Western Wolves

$21,156.00

2013

ESEA Invite Season 13 Finals

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

Denial eSports

$17,500.00

2013

Svecup Västerås 2013

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

Crave Gaming

$4,500.00

2013

Swedish Championship 2013

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-1

Epsilon

$15,500.00

2013

Dreamhack Summer 2013

Ninjas in Pyjamas

2-0

Epsilon

$10,800.00

2013

SLTV StarSeries VI

Ninjas in Pyjamas

3-2

Natus Vincere

$6,000.00