HLTV.org spoke to Moscow Five CEO Dima "ddd1ms" Smelyi about his team's displeasing trip to India Gaming Carnival.
How was Moscow Five's trip to India
Gaming Carnival? Atrocious enough to make the Moscow Five boss fear for
his players' safety and lives by the end of the event.
It was a clearly upset and shocked
Smelyi HLTV.org spoke to when he was awaiting confirmation from the
team's manager that the team had passed Delhi International airport's
security gates.
Moscow Five, who were one of the two
international teams in India, reached the tournament's semifinals. That
was when the organizers decided to shut down the entire event.
The event itself was a disaster. It
let people to believe it would be one of the year's biggest, spangled
events, with well over $300,000 in the total prize pool for the featured
games.
Reports just days before the event
was schedule to kick off even said the event had been cancelled, checks
had bounced and later on, during the event, computer tournaments had
been called off.
Smelyi confessed he should have
listened to advice given by fnatic and Natus Vincere officials, who told
him to drop the Indian event.
"fnatic and Natus Vincere managers told me: "Dima, it's fake! Dont visit ICG 2012. I should have listened to them," he wrote in his blog.
Despite all this, India Gaming
Carnival did take place, at least to some degree, but failed to an
enormous extent to meet any of the expectations set by its organizers,
WTF Eventz.
Why did Moscow Five not go any
further than the semifinals? According to Smelyi, the organizers decided
to call off the entire event, shutting down the venue's electricity in
the process.
Smelyi furthermore informed HLTV.org that event officials disappeared from the scene and refused to accept their calls.
All of this happened after the
organizers supposedly tried to delay the tournament so that Moscow Five
could not play an eventual final, seeing as they had to catch their
flight on April 9.
Smelyi, however, saw through the
organizers' scheme and booked tickets for April 10, attempting to assure
that his team would be able to play the tournament's final, which they
were sure to reach.
By the time the organizers shut down
the event, the extended return tickets to Moscow purchased by
Smelyi turned out to be nothing but an additional expenditure –
approximately $2,900.
While all of this does not sound very
life threatening or the cause of fearing for someone's life, it was
when the team returned to their hotel the situation became even more
suspicious.
As the team and their manager were
waiting for a taxi to take them to their hotel after the shutdown, they
spotted four thug-like men who were paying attention to them,
Smelyi noted.
After getting in the taxi, the Moscow
Five players saw the four men got in a car and followed them. The
situation did not develop any further, though, and the Russians
eventually went to sleep.
However, Moscow Five's team manager stayed up and recorded this video, explaining some of what they had gone through.
Apparently,
they were told that the organizers had nothing to do with the event
abruptly shutting down and that it was out of their control, followed by
several what seems to be empty promises.
Kushagra,
who is the director of WTF Eventz, even told Moscow Five that they would
compensate their expenses involved with traveling to India and a
substantial amount of the first-place prize.
More
specific, the organizers offered to cover Moscow Five $10,000 for their
participation and reimburse $4,000 in travel expenses in return for not
publishing footage of the venue being shut down.
The team
had provided Kushagra with necessary contact information, such as hotel
room numbers, e-mails and telephone numbers, and he promised to meet
them later that day. He did not.
This is not
the only recording Moscow Five made during their trip to India. They
supposedly filmed a conversation with Kushagra himself, which is
believed to be the reason for the thugs appearing.
Smelyi went
on and said that when the team woke up, they realized that someone had
broken into their rooms and robbed them for money and a 8GB memory stick
with all the said footage on it.
The
situation has taken a huge toll on Smelyi, who felt it was necessary to
wait with telling this story before he knew his team and manager were in
safety in the airport, en route Moscow.
The Moscow
Five chief will, together with the team's manager, host a live stream
this Friday about their experience, mainly in Russian, but with some
questions and answers in English.
HLTV.org's coverage of India Gaming Carnival is not over as we have more breaking news to reveal.
Courtesy ----- http://www.hltv.org/news/8440-m5-scammed-robbed-in-india
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