I agree with Matthew on that one.
They want to expose a larger audience to the game, so they need to address people with high view counts. People with high view counts usually do this youtube thing for a living and thus don't have time to play a single game consistently to get good at it. Most of the people who watch them don't even care about the gameplay quality of the players but more about the commentary and laughs.
Are you watching competitive streams of games you never seen or played? - No.
Most viewers will not randomly watch a competitive match of a game they just got introduced to, and be engaged and moved by it - because they don't know how the game works, nor have they ever played it to understand it and the game's mechanics. Even players who already own the game or at least a large majority of them - for the first few months of their gaming, STILL don't take active part in competitive events, competitive play or generally care about competitive at all.
Competitive plays are only appealing to players who already play the game for a while now, and in order to make that pool bigger we need to add more players into it by having promotional events and sales. Only then will the competitive promotions will work, because there will be a larger targeted audience.
The only flaw is that old-school players are not staying around because of the frustration from the lack of content. So all you get is waves of new people, they get bored of the game and leave, and then waves of new people.
As a side note, the way you plainly copy pasted the entire conversation with Matthew and Howard and posted it online is pretty rude and disrespectful. If I were you I would take it down and put an actual message from you about the subject.