One Danish CS:GO team is ‘restructuring’ with the assistance of 2 banned cheaters

These controversial signings will surely result in backlash.

CS:GO default graphic showing two soldiers on a pink background.
Image via Valve

Sashi Esport, a CS:GO organization based in Denmark, is overhauling its team under the leadership of two Valve-banned cheaters—former MOUZ coach Allan “Rejin” Petersen and former Heroic coach Nicolai “HUNDEN” Petersen.

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Sashi hired Rejin to be its new sports director on June 30, while HUNDEN was brought on to be the team’s head coach on July 17.

“We are very pleased to be able to present HUNDEN to Sashi Esport,” Rejin said. “Nicolai and I have known each other for many years and have previously worked together, so when the opportunity to get him to Sashi Esport presented itself, it was an obvious choice for us to reach out to him.”

Rejin and HUNDEN were both caught using the infamous coach spectator bug in the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC)’s investigation in 2020. This CS:GO bug allowed coaches to place their cameras anywhere on the map and even free roam around the map, thus letting them collect precious information about the enemy team during live matches.

They’ve served their time since then and are allowed to coach in professional CS:GO tournaments with the exception of the Majors, which are sponsored by Valve. Rejin is permanently banned from playing or coaching at Majors, while HUNDEN is banned until the conclusion of the PGL Copenhagen CS2 Major in 2024.

Rejin had been working as Endpoint’s head coach before joining Sachi. HUNDEN, on the other hand, had his analyst contract with Astralis terminated in June as part of the team’s overhaul. Although Rejin was caught using the coach spectator bug on seven occasions, according to the ESIC, he’s far from being as controversial as HUNDEN, who was caught using it on two maps.

HUNDEN was banned for a second time in 2021 after he served his coach spectator bug suspension. ESIC found out HUNDEN had locked the Heroic members out of a strategy folder and attempted to leak it to a direct rival attending IEM Cologne, presumably Astralis. HUNDEN, though, had his two-year ban surprisingly overturned at the end of 2022 and became free to participate in ESIC events once again.

Related: HUNDEN: The story of the infamous CS:GO cheater that was banned twice and can return to pro play ahead of time

As imagined, the community’s reaction to Sachi picking up HUNDEN is far from ideal.

HUNDEN and Rejin will be in charge of Sachi’s “restructuring” ahead of CS2. The organization was home to veterans MSL and aizy until June 2023 but now only has the up-and-coming player Mikkel “⁠n1xen⁠” Borlund on its active lineup. This means HUNDEN and Rejin will likely be scouting four new players in the coming months.

Author
Image of Leonardo Biazzi
Leonardo Biazzi
Staff writer and CS:GO lead. Leonardo has been passionate about games since he was a kid and graduated in Journalism in 2018. Before Leonardo joined Dot Esports in 2019, he worked for Brazilian outlet Globo Esporte. Leonardo also worked for HLTV.org between 2020 and 2021 as a senior writer, until he returned to Dot Esports and became part of the staff team.