Photo via PGL

OG to reportedly replace mantuu with degster in CS:GO lineup

The European organization is bringing in degster on a full-time basis after he impressed at the BLAST Premier Spring Finals.

Team Spirit’s benched star Abdul “⁠degster⁠” Gasanov is on his way to OG to take over the AWPing duties of Mateusz “⁠mantuu⁠” Wilczewski, according to a joint report between Dexerto and 1pv.fr.

Recommended Videos

This report comes nearly a month after OG called degster as a stand-in to replace mantuu at the BLAST Premier Spring Finals because the Polish sniper was recovering from an illness. Degster averaged a 1.16 rating in the tournament and led the international team to a surprising semifinal run. OG and Spirit have already agreed on an undisclosed transfer fee and the announcement should happen soon, according to the report.

With the arrival of degster, mantuu will be immediately moved to the bench. The 24-year-old dedicated sniper has been with OG since the organization entered CS:GO esports in 2019. With mantuu’s imminent removal, there won’t be any more members of the original OG CS:GO lineup on the active team.

Degster was moved to the bench shortly after Spirit’s Cinderella run at the PGL Antwerp Major in May, where they reached the semifinals. The Russian star AWPer didn’t want to relocate to Serbia, the country Spirit chose to move to after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February, and the organization mentioned there were also differences in philosophy.

The signing of degster should improve OG’s firepower, given that mantuu has averaged a 1.08 rating in LAN tournaments this year while degster has averaged a 1.23 rating in offline tournaments in 2022.

OG have already headed into the summer player break since they don’t have any matches scheduled for the next few weeks and should have enough time to practice with degster before the second part of the season begins.


Dot Esports is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Related Content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Author
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.