The 27-year-old Brazilian player Vito "kNgV-" Giuseppe was upset with Valve’s decision to deduct RMR points of those teams whose coaches had been found guilty of abusing the spectator bug as it involved his current team MIBR as well. Though no punishment was given to any of the coaches involved, their respective teams had to face the consequences as per Valve’s verdict on the incident.
RELATED: MIBR And Hard Legion’s RMR Points to be Reset Due to Spectator Bug Use
MIBR AWPer kNgV expressed what he felt about Valve’s verdict on the spectator bug incident via a Tweet (now deleted) in Brazilian which reads as follows,
“I don't agree with Valve's punishment. Taking all of our points just because of 1 round. In my opinion, this is unfair and ridiculous."
He was not happy about the fact that MIBR’s RMR points were being reset just for using the coaching bug in one round of the entire tournament. The Brazilian team has dropped to the bottom of the North American RMR leaderboard following Valve’s verdict before which they were ranked 7th.
According to ESL and BTS (Beyond The Summit) the organizer’s of the first two RMR tournaments ESL One: Road to Rio and cs_summit 6, MIBR’s coach Ricardo "dead" Sinigaglia was caught abusing the spectator bug red-handed on two separate instances for which he was handed out the following punishments,
RELATED: ESIC to Investigate 25,000 CS:GO Demos For Spectator Bug Abuse, Gives Offenders Chance to Confess
Richard Lewis was quick to respond to kNgV, mocking MIBR for always being the victims while also highlighting the fact that MIBR played against their academy team (Yeah Gaming) in both the RMR tournaments.