Former Sentinel player Jay "Sinatraa" Won pointed out that the 100 Thieves' new roster was not world-class while watching the latter fight against Luminosity Gaming in an article of One Esports.
The 100 Thieves lost against Luminosity seemingly pulled the trigger for Sinatraa's critiques as a new addition to its arsenal - Sean "bang" Bezerra and Noah "jcStani" Smith - felt short with its 1-2 loss.
Sinatraa even mentioned that Ethan "ethan" Arnold was the only reliable player to make the right plays on or off his teammates.
Furthermore, Sinatraa talked about a decent In-game Leader (IGL), which he defined as the one who makes calls then eventually rebuts that some other players too are great in decision-making, finalizing with a conclusion that the team should not have someone that calls or decides everything.
The 21-year-old Valorant player was an epitome of mechanics in Overwatch, where he had been a player for the San Francisco Shock of the Overwatch League (OWL).
Prior to his signage of contract with the Shock, he was with Selfless gaming, which ultimately lent him a Most Valuable Player Award and the 2019 Overwatch League Grand Finals; consequently, in the same year, he had appeared and won internationally on the Overwatch World Cup player for his country, hailed as an MVP too.
Due to his excellence with his Selfless gaming that time, he was hailed as North America's best DPS Player, especially on his favorite character - Tracer - that flipped opponents' winning bids upside down all the time, every single time.
With a decorated background in Overwatch, Valorant seemed to be pretty in line with that as well before an incident transpired to ruin his career.
Before his suspension, Sinatraa playing for Sentinels clinched second place in the FaZe Clan Invitational and champion in the Ignition Series' Pop Flash Tournament.
Following his apparent domination in the field, in March 2021, his girlfriend accused him of sexual abuse that cost him suspension of both Riot games and his team, Sentinels.
Two months after the incident, for failing to cooperate with the investigation, Riot Games again issued a half-a-year long suspension and an additional requirement of complete professional conduct training before he can continue his long-paused domineering in the shooting field.
With his suspension being lifted, Sinatraa slowly gets back on his groove through live streaming via Twitch.
Won summarized a total of more than 2 million hours with over 3 million views gain grinding Valorant's different modes: the competitive ones.
Content creators on Tiktok seemed to be fond of Sinatraa's public appearance after his issue as content regarding Sinatraa's in-game reaction, clutches, aces, and even flops came aplenty online.
One of which was from itsrankz embedding Sinatraa's recorded reaction on his/her whiff. [A whiff in Valorant's terms is a flop of killing or damaging an enemy with a whole round of ammo]
@itsrankz Sinatraa reacted to my whiff. :,) #valorant #sinatraa ⬠AUUUGHHHHH - 㠤
Moreover, Sinatraa has over 1 million followers on Twitch and has reached a total viewership of over 45 million times.
Lastly, getting tensed with his serious comeback, Won recorded over 30k viewership in a single stream and ranked 276 among Twitch's famous live streamers.
Written by: Jhon Paul Salazar