Former star LPL shares the situation after retiring for a heavy sentence of the tournament
Among all professional tournaments in the current League of Legends village, perhaps there are no strict penalties like LPL. Even these penalties are the endless “content” of the media and the community. But if anyone thinks that the impact of the penalty for the player is too small, it is wrong. Accordingly, Leyan – a former famous star of LPL has shared from himself with these punishments recently.
Accordingly, the former star LPL said that the time of the tournament was suspended for the Tet holiday, this player returned to his hometown with only 9k yuan in his pocket (about 31 million VND). The cause comes from his penalties during the competition.
Leyan said: “There was a joke that I was the payer to the entire LPL Executive Board. At that time I received only two months of a year. I was deducted for half a year for bugal errors, deducted 3 months of salary because of arguing each other with netizens in the livestream, deducted 1 month of salary because of not participating in training. 9000 yuan is what I remain after 2 years of professional competition. “
In fact, Leyan himself does not necessarily have a clean private life. He has been involved in many behind -the -scenes dramas, such as vulgar behavior when livestreaming or taking advantage of the game to cheat in the rank.
Not only Leyan, but many LPL superstars also have extremely heavy penalties
Before Leyan, LPL superstars like Uzi or Thery, Jackkeylove also had LPL's penalties. Worth mentioning, there are many punishments with extremely “bad crying”. For example, Uzi was fined for bringing slippers to the field or Tian was fined for going to the toilet and “interrupting the match”.
However, there is also a pretty sarcastic factor that LPL, despite the heavy penalty, but this area is famous for the scoring arrangement – one of the most serious crimes of a professional athlete. Therefore, perhaps the BTC LPL as well as Riot here need more appropriate and effective sanctions in the future.