Corinthians Esports Livestream Chaos: Accusations, Unpaid Wages, and Missing Money

Corinthians Esports Livestream Chaos: Accusations, Unpaid Wages, and Missing Money

Andre Guaraldo

21 May, 2025, 17:51

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Last updated: 21 May, 2025, 18:03

The livestream by Corinthians Esports, which intended to address mounting fan concerns, degenerated into a spectacle of unmanaged conflicts, financial revelations, and public confrontations on May 20, 2025. Lasting over two hours, the event exposed systemic organizational failures, contested financial practices, and unresolved labor disputes.

Below is a chronological reconstruction of the key moments, debates, and controversies that defined this watershed moment for the organization, enriched with direct quotes and contextual analysis to illuminate the depth of the crisis.

The Disorganized Prelude

The stream opened with host Mateus and staff member Fixa apologizing for President Milson Januario’s delayed arrival. During this 6-minute gap, Mateus attempted to preemptively address minor topics, including preparations for the Esports World Cup (EWC) and Vicoria Bispo's upcoming trip to Russia for a global championship. The lack of preparedness set the tone for the chaos to follow.

Financial Transparency, or Lack Thereof

Milson revealed the organization operates at a R$1 million monthly deficit, with fixed costs covering player salaries, travel, infrastructure, and accommodations. Revenue from sponsorships and tournaments falls short, forcing reliance on high-risk investments. The organization's President acknowledged selective partnerships, refusing deals with gambling platforms like “tigrinho” (tiger fortune) due to ethical concerns:

“We have contractual matters and we respect contracts... we will not publicize anything that we do not believe is good for society”

A bombshell emerged: R$200,000 in prize money had been diverted - a revelation Milson claimed was recent and under investigation. This admission raised immediate questions about oversight:

“We were victims of unscrupulous people who diverted prize money... we are taking action.”

Corinthians Esports reaffirmed that they are not going down the path of promoting scammy casino games (credits: Fortune Tiger)
Corinthians Esports reaffirmed that they are not going down the path of promoting scammy casino games (credit: Fortune Tiger)

The National Free Fire Tournament S0candal Explodes

The livestream’s first major conflict erupted over the handling of R$4,000 provided by the National Free Fire Association (NFA) for player expenses during a Brasília tournament. Milson claimed the total cost of sending the team was R$30,000, with NFA covering only a fraction. He defended assigning analyst John to manage funds, providing players R$80 daily for meals and reimbursing transportation.

This narrative unraveled when journalist Gustavo Coga joined, citing NFA representative Bernardo Assad’s investigation:

“On the third day, each player received only R$120 in total—not the promised R$80 per day... transportation refunds were only processed after NFA intervention.”

Milson and manager Victoria doubled down, arguing funds were allocated to John’s account for “controlled spending.” Bernardo countered that this was a “serious staff error”, demanding accountability:

"It is not an accusation of theft, but there was a serious failure to prioritize the well-being of the players”.

The National Free Fire Association had to defend themselves of the accusations made by Corinthians Esports (credits: NFA)
The National Free Fire Association had to defend themselves of the accusations made by Corinthians Esports (credit: NFA)

An Explosive Confrontation

Former employee Luan Marinho joined the stream, alleging unpaid wages from 2023 for organizing community events and creating content. He claimed:

"I worked nine months without pay... I tried to resolve it without confrontation, but I was ignored.”

Milson responded by reading private messages, suggesting Luan had been dishonest:

“You came to me saying you wanted to collaborate, but then you charged R$12,000... that's blackmail.”

The exchange grew increasingly tense, with Luan accusing Milson of spreading falsehoods:

“You distorted my words live... I was never a blackmailer.”

Milson then threatened legal action over “slander, insult, and defamation.”

Luan Marinho, now an Esports Caster and Influencer, once worked for Corinthians Esports without being properly paid (credits: Luan Marinho)
Luan Marinho, now an Esports Caster and Influencer, once worked for Corinthians Esports without being properly paid (credit: Luan Marinho)

The NFA Debate Reignites

Bernardo (NFA representativa) joined the call, further escalating tensions. He presented evidence contradicting Corinthians’ claims:

“The R$4,000 was for six people, not ten... by the third day, the players had only received R$120.”

Victoria admitted increasing meal allowances from R$60 to R$80 after complaints but blamed miscommunication:

“We increased the voucher after complaints... but John had no logistics experience.”

Bernardo dismissed this, stressing the error stemmed from lack of transparency:

“If they had admitted their mistake and apologized, none of this would have happened.”

Salary Delays and Defensive Closures

Coga pivoted to reports of delayed salaries for the Corinthians VALORANT team (where rumors say that both squads have gone two months without salaries being paid). Milson responded vaguely:

“Contracts must be fulfilled... if payments were not made today, it is late.”

Victoria offered a half-hearted apology:

“I deeply regret... these public controversies hurt the team's image.”

Milson closed defensively, admitting his inexperience but defending his vision:

“I am an amateur, yes, but I am passionate... that doesn’t disqualify me.”

A Fractured Institution

What began as an attempt at transparency revealed an organization grappling with foundational issues:

  1. Financial Mismanagement: The R$1 million monthly deficit and diverted prize money underscored lax oversight. As Milson admitted: “The business model assumes risk... revenues are uncertain.”
  2. Operational Amateurism: The NFA controversy highlighted poor logistical planning. Bernardo’s critique cut deep: “Putting an inexperienced analyst to manage funds was a very serious mistake.”
  3. Labor Disputes: Luan’s case exemplified broader contractual negligence. His impassioned plea - “I just wanted to get paid for the work done” - contrasted sharply with Milson’s legal threats.
  4. Leadership Defensiveness: Rather than acknowledging errors, management deflected blame. Victoria’s apology - “This hurts the fans who supported our recovery” - rang hollow after hours of evasion.

Official Follow-Up: Promise of Reform

On May 21, 2025, Corinthians Esports issued a formal statement addressing the fallout from the livestream:

“The numerous comments received after the live broadcast led us to reflect responsibly... We sincerely apologize to everyone for the situation.”

The 342-word note struck a conciliatory tone, marking the organization’s first acknowledgment of systemic communication failures:

  1. Accountability: Admitting responsibility for creating “room for interpretation”, the statement diverged from Milson’s defensive posture during the stream.
  2. Structural Reforms: Promising to “review processes and evolve”, it hinted at operational overhauls without specifying timelines.
  3. Fan Engagement: Emphasizing the need to “improve communications with fans, players, and partners,” the message positioned transparency as a renewed priority.

Critically, the apology extended beyond the NFA and Luan controversies to address broader governance issues: “The passion that drives Corinthians Esports is the same that makes us seek excellence and respect in every action”. This rhetorical shift, from Milson’s focus on “passion” as justification during the stream to framing it as a driver of accountability, suggested internal reckonings.

A Debacle That Exposes Systemic Failures

The two-hour livestream that intended to clarify Corinthians Esports' operations instead unveiled a cascade of institutional crises. President Milson Januario’s attempt to address fan concerns dissolved into heated confrontations over financial mismanagement, including a R$1 million monthly deficit and R$200,000 in diverted prize money. The broadcast’s most damning moments featured a former employee alleging unpaid wages and NFA representatives contradicting claims about player allowances at a tournament.

While the organization later issued a public apology acknowledging communication failures, the statement sidestepped concrete details—failing to address salary delays, labor disputes, or accountability for financial irregularities. The debacle revealed an organization prioritizing competitive success over operational transparency, eroding fan trust and spotlighting systemic issues plaguing football clubs’ esports ventures.


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Feature image credit: Corinthians Esports

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