BLAST Premier bans Russian-based teams from events

CS:GO esports series BLAST Premier has announced that no Russian-based teams will be invited to play in its events for the foreseeable future. 

Furthermore, the WePlay CIS Masters Spring 2022, a regional qualifier for BLAST Premier originally set to run from March 25th – 27th, has also been cancelled.

BLAST Premier
Image credit: BLAST Premier

RELATED: WePlay Holding ends ties with Russian, Belarusian companies

According to BLAST Premier, the decision has been as a response to Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. 

According to a post on Twitter by Luís Mira, Esports Editor at Dexterto, the statement has been seemingly clarified to impact only Russian organisations, not Russian-majority teams. As such, Ukrainian esports organisation Natus Vincere will be allowed to compete despite having a Russian-majority lineup.

A BLAST Premier spokesperson noted in a Twitter post: “Gaming and esports unites people from all races, countries and beliefs. We hope the situation on the world stage reflects this as soon as possible.”

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, numerous esports organisations expressed their support for the country by changing its logos to match the Ukrainian national flag’s colour scheme. 

Furthermore, the Ukrainian esports holding company WePlay Holding announced it has terminated all partnership agreements with companies from Russia and Belarus

RELATED: Betway and BLAST Premier renews partnership

The military conflict, which is an escalation of the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War that began in 2014, has already caused the cancellation or postponement of multiple esports events, This includes Riot Games’ VCT 2022 EMEA and its League of Legends Continental Leagues, Tencent’s PUBG Mobile Pro League CIS 2022 Spring and EA’s Apex Legends Global Series. 

Today marks the sixth day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Multiple European states expressed support for Ukraine joining the European Union while the Russian offensive intensifies.

Subscribe to ESI on YouTube

Time Stamp:

More from Esports Insider