Chia's meltdown took place at the gamers' lounge area at the Wuhan Optical Valley Electronic Sports Stadium in China, in front of Chinese reporters and other gamers. Speaking to The Straits Times, Mr Aw said the punch had come out of the blue. Chia had walked over to him suddenly, hit him and left without uttering a word. 'I was totally stunned,' he said. When contacted, Chia admitted hitting Mr Aw and walking away, but said he had slapped Mr Aw, not punched him. He said he had hit Mr Aw out of frustration, blaming the Swords' poor showing on what he called Mr Aw's lacklustre managerial skills. Within an hour, the chief executive of the CGS Andy Reif had sacked Chia and banned him from the CGS for life, effectively ending the gaming career of Singapore's top pro-gamer. Chia was sent packing yesterday. Another Swords member, who spoke on condition of anonymity, felt the team as a whole had been playing below par. 'Maybe the pressure was too much for Wilson, who has sacrificed a lot,' he added. Chia quit his job earlier this year to focus on his game and paid for a training trip to Japan last month out of his own pocket. He is now thinking of starting an Internet business. 'I regret punching him in front of everyone,' he said. The CGS is a professional gaming league. Players get between US$500 and US$3,500 a month.
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