Παρασκευή 14 Μαρτίου 2014

All-Star 2014 heads to Paris, France

 

 

We're excited to announce that the 2014 League of Legends All-Star event will be held in Paris, France. Taking place from Thursday, May 8 to Sunday, May 11 at Le Zenith Arena, a new format will feature the All-Star Invitational and All-Star Challenge. With these changes, the event will showcase competition from both the top teams and the favorite pro-players from each region in four days of competition.

The Format

The All-Star Invitational

Serving as this year’s main event, the All-Star Invitational will bring together the regional winners of the NA LCS, EU LCS, LPL, GPL, and OGN Champions. These five teams will duke it out in group stage play, with the top four advancing to a best-of-three semifinal. The winners will meet in in a best-of-five final to compete for the $50,000 winner-take-all prize.

The All-Star Challenge

At the beginning of each day of competition, players will be able to watch The All-Star Challenge, a series of games featuring two mixed region rosters. Players will not only elect two pros from their region to play in the Challenge event, they will also vote to influence aspects of the modes that the pros play. Player Voting begins on Sunday, March 30, so mark your calendars!

A Call to Action: AMA with Riot

Want to learn more about the All-Star process? Join us on Reddit for an AMA on Monday, March 10 at 10:00am PST.
Tickets will go on sale soon, and be sure to check out lolesports.com in the coming weeks for more information including a detailed schedule and voting information!

 

Πέμπτη 6 Μαρτίου 2014

UPCOMING MATCHES

 

Thursday, Mar 6 Today

 

EU Spring Split - Week 8


Approx.18:00  

ALLIANCE  9W-10L   VS  GAMBIT 12W-7L



Approx.19:00  

SK GAMING 10W-8L  VS  ROCCAT 11W-8L


Approx.20:00 

 MILLENIUM 6W-13L  VS  SUPA HOT CREW  8W-10L


Approx. 21:00 

 FNATIC 10W-9L  VS  SK GAMING 10W-8L


Approx. 22:00

  SUPA HOT CREW  8W-10L  VS COPENHAGEN 9W-10L



 

Alliance's Unshakeable Jungler

 

Alliance finds itself in a fight to stave-off relegation and the players have to figure out how to stop being part of the problem and become part of the solution. That's been particularly important for Alliance's jungler Ilyas “Shook” Hartsema, whose play has veered between heroic and tragic throughout the turbulent season.

A SHOT AT REDEMPTION

Despite being a top LCS prospect since 2012, Shook's road to the LCS hasn't been an easy one. At times, he's been his own worst enemy, netting himself a one-year LCS ban at the start of 2013 due to toxic behavior.
It was a costly mistake, and one that had been a long time coming. Shook was forced onto the sidelines just days before his mousesports team competed in the 2013 qualifiers, and watched as the team narrowly missed promotion.
But in many ways, it was also a great opportunity for Shook to get a fresh start and a new outlook. He said in an interview on the Alliance website that, “The biggest change for me personally is that I now have a much more positive attitude towards other players in solo queue; it helps the team a lot more than flaming ever will.”


He joined the Copenhagen Wolves' squad during their dominant run on the Challenger circuit, which let him keep his game at a professional level while learning to be a better sport and waiting for his LCS eligibility to be restored. It also drew the notice of the Alliance team, and he was recruited to be one of the founding members of the squad.

BIG PLAYS, BIG THROWS

At his best, Shook is a set-up artist for the rest of his team. He starts fights in the right places at the right time, and serves up kills on a silver platter for his carries. He can also stand toe-to-toe with ace junglers like Araneae and Cyanide, keeping them on the defensive with strong early counter-jungling.

But it doesn't always go according to plan. The problem for Shook is twofold: first, sometimes there are no plays to be made and yet he'll be out of position at a key moment because he's trying to force something to happen. Wickd has been picked off more than a few times because Shook has lost track of the enemy jungler or has simply prioritized something else. 

Second, Shook can only do so much. Those “silver platter” kills that Shook gives his teammates sometimes end up on the floor as Alliance fumble the play. Both Tabzz and Froggen have let good chances slip through their fingers.



Shook came to Alliance to be a playmaker, but the problem dogging Alliance's heels is that they don't reliably execute their big plays. When they do, as in their game against Fnatic in Week 7, they're as good a team as you'll find in the LCS. Shook and Froggen have tremendous chemistry and Shook's initiation instincts combined with Froggen's positioning and follow-through make them a powerful duo.

SEEING RED

If Shook has a weakness, it is that he doesn't always know when to play safe. Like Alliance as a whole, Shook comes to the team with years of success under his belt and a confidence in his own abilities. That sometimes turns his daring into outright recklessness.



A perfect example of Shook's best and worst traits came in Week 6 against SK. While Alliance ultimately won the game, they came very close to losing control as Shook gave himself up to SK Gaming at crucial moments. With Alliance and SK almost dead even at 24 minutes, Alliance went for a pick against Jesiz in the mid lane. At the last minute, Shook peeled off to engage nRated and Svenskeren simultaneously. He got blown-up instantly and that left Tabzz and Nyph as easy targets for SK's clean-up. It was a fatal miscue from the Alliance jungler that turned a crucial situation into a disaster.



That same game also showed Shook and Alliance at their best. As they stabilized against SK, Alliance were finally thinking and acting as a team, and Shook was always at the point of attack. Shook's Wukong was an agent of chaos as he plunged headlong into SK and busted their positioning, cracking the door open for the rest of Alliance to pour through. His plays created the opportunities Alliance needed for their comeback win. If Alliance makes the playoffs, it will be on the back of plays like that.

COMEBACK KID

Shook has dealt with adversity before and come out stronger for it, and Alliance are by no means out of playoff contention. If you set aside Alliance's terrible Week 1, where they lost four straight games, they would be like a lot of their rivals: good, but inconsistent.


Shook needs to continue making good plays and cut the bad decisions. But in many ways, he's already doing what he needs to: creating the opportunities the rest of his team needs to exploit. For all the ups-and-downs of Alliance's season, Shook is still there, opening the doors to victory for his team.

Now they need to walk through them together.

Τρίτη 4 Μαρτίου 2014


The Recap: Europe Week 7

 

Europe will be Europe. No team is safe from the teams below them, and the standings are ever fluid. This week, ROCCAT didn’t have an amazing showing, while both SK Gaming and Copenhagen Wolves showed that they can more than compete with the big boys.

Games of the Week

Day 1: ROCCAT vs. Copenhagen Wolves

Sometimes, Copenhagen Wolves jungler Amazing lives up to his name. Once his Nocturne - an unusual pick to begin with - hit level 6 and got his ultimate ability Paranoia, he became an absolute terror. It seemed that every time he activated his ultimate, multiple members of ROCCAT went down. Both Youngbuck and his Trundle and Unlimited’s Annie did their jobs by locking up just about anyone in sight, making sure that members of the already behind ROCCAT couldn’t escape from the carnage that Amazing facilitated. After ROCCAT grabbed a risky Baron kill in a desperation move, CW showed exactly how strong they were, dropping four members of the buffed squad and pushing in for the win.

Day 2: Fnatic vs. Gambit Gaming
                 

If there was ever a good time for Fnatic to finally break their eight game losing streak, it’d be against their perpetual rivals Gambit, the team that set them down their huge slide way back in Week 3. To do so, they took their patented double AP composition, giving sOAZ the extra hot Lulu in the top lane to go up against Darien’s Dr. Mundo. Right away, the plan succeeded, with sOAZ grabbing a whole bunch of early kills, essentially forcing Darien out of the game. Meanwhile, Cyanide and his Wukong was ganking all over the place, feeding both xPeke’s Nidalee and Rekkles’ Sivir. After getting behind, Gambit couldn’t force the teamfights necessary to win against Fnatic’s poke-heavy composition, and Fnatic simply sieged down the Nexus. Finally, Fnatic ended their nightmare, and did so without dying a single time.
Day 2: Supa Hot Crew vs. ROCCAT

Supa Hot Crew has historically struggled against ROCCAT, but not today. Things started well for them, with Moopz and his Gragas taking advantage of Overpow’s mid lane Vladimir, allowing Impaler to put pressure on the other two lanes. This ensured that they didn’t lose many objectives during the early phase of the game. If ROCCAT had been allowed to farm sufficiently and get to the late game, it would have been a struggle for Supa Hot Crew to finish the game out, but they made sure to knock out the reigning leaders of the European LCS before Vladimir or Xaxus’ Trundle managed to get strong enough to really give them trouble. Thanks to the loss, ROCCAT is now tied with Gambit for first place.

Big Players of the Week

 Amazing




The Wolves are on a four game winning streak, and Amazing is at the core of their success. His Nocturne play against the top-ranked ROCCAT was stellar, and his Lee Sin play against Millenium was bold and risky but ultimately extremely successful. Expect some more highlight plays from this Wolf as the season continues.


sOAZ
Fnatic’s top laner struggled hard in his first game this week as Renekton, going 1/5/3 in their loss against Alliance. But on Friday, he more than made up for it with his Lulu top pick against Gambit. He dominated Darien’s Dr. Mundo in the laning phase, giving Fnatic the early lead they needed to run away with the rest of the match.

Surprise of the Week

Fnatic finally breaks their losing streak


Fnatic picking up their first win in nine games was surprising in and of itself, but the real shockers come when you consider how they did it. First of all, they did it against the ever-strong Gambit, and secondly, they did it with the double AP composition that has given them so much trouble in the past. They showed exactly how the high-damage team selection should work, getting a lead early and never letting it go.
SK Gaming, Copenhagen Wolves climbing the ladder

SK Gaming has been sitting in the middle of the pack for a while now, but they’re beginning to show signs of life. After two wins this week, they’re officially sitting in third place all by themselves, and have their sights on Gambit and ROCCAT, who have both been inconsistent in recent weeks. Expect a battle between the three.
Two weeks ago, the Copenhagen Wolves were 4-8 and tied for last place. Four games later, however, they’re sitting pretty at 8-8 and are tied for fourth place. Amazing and Forg1ven have been leading their squad with incredible play, dropping Fnatic, ROCCAT, and Millenium twice on their way up the leaderboard. In typical EU LCS fashion, no highly seeded team is safe from the bottom tier squads, and things can change incredibly quickly.

Disappointment of the Week

VandeR’s Morgana on Day 1



ROCCAT support player VandeR has become known for his incredible Thresh play, but teams have begun to recognize that and ban out the Chain Warden when they go up against him. Last week, he simply picked Morgana and continued to be a terror in the bottom lane. However, he didn’t keep up that level of performance forever, and it showed during ROCCAT’s game against Copenhagen Wolves, where he seemingly couldn’t land a Dark Binding or get his Soul Shackles to linger for long enough to be effective. His struggles were a huge part of ROCCAT’s loss that first day.

 

EU LCS Week 8 Preview

 

Super Week is back, and with it comes some crunch time for teams looking to get into the playoffs. Some look to be making late season pushes, such as SK Gaming and the Copenhagen Wolves. For other teams, pickings are beginning to look a bit grim, especially for Alliance and Millenium, who have 6-10 and 5-11 records, respectively.

ROCCAT vs. Gambit

When: Tuesday, 3/4, 18:00 CET / 9:00 AM PST
With Fnatic out of the equation, it’s time for these two to prove once and for all who is Europe's rightful king. ROCCAT have trounced Gambit both times they’ve met so far but they're on a three-game losing streak, and have never looked more vulnerable. Also note, the second time these teams played, Gambit had four subs; this match signifies the first time since Week 2 that these teams go head to head at full capacity.

 

The critical focus here will be on the mid lane. Overpow ended with a 15.0 KDA when Gambit allowed him to use Kayle in Week 2. Gambit will have to be especially wary during champion select to not shoot themselves in the foot like they did in January - and Alex Ich cannot have another 1/3/0 performance.

Supa Hot Crew vs. Alliance

When: Tuesday, 3/4, 20:00 CET / 11:00 AM PST
Both of these teams went 1-1 last week. Despite the Crew’s prominence just a few weeks ago when they nearly cracked the top three, they’re back towards the bottom. They need a win. But the same can be said for Alliance, who at times looked like the dominant team they were predicted to be. Will the second Super Week finally unveil everything for Alliance? Or will the Crew rally behind their star AD Carry, MrRalleZ, and pull out a victory?

There is, of course, a few major tells leading into this game. Not only does Supa Hot Crew have a 2-0 record against Alliance, but MrRalleZ has never died. That’s right; RalleZ has a 17/0/17 score line when it comes to facing Froggen and Co. Step 1 for Alliance on Tuesday will be ending that streak—only then will they have a shot at taking down the Crew.

Gambit vs. Copenhagen Wolves

When: Wednesday, 3/5, 20:00 CET / 11:00 AM PST
It’s hard not to take a moment to be proud of what the Copenhagen Wolves have achieved thus far. In Week 5, the team was 4-8, facing down the barrel of relegation. Now, they’re 8-8, and another win or two could put them easily into the top three. The Wolves are putting on an impressive display of what to do right. The LCS is a game of endurance, and the winners are the ones who can play with consistency. The Wolves look to be the only team at the top of their game right now.


Gambit will be their toughest matchup yet. Both prior matchups have gone in Gambit’s favor—Genja has a 31.0 KDA against them. For the Copenhagen Wolves to continue their winning streak they’ll have to do more than just play consistent; they’re going to have to show that they can play at the highest levels, too.

Millenium vs. Fnatic

When: Wednesday, 3/5, 22:00 CET / 1:00 PM PST
Evaluating how Millenium got to the bottom of the rankings isn’t a difficult thing to do. They have been hot and cold all season long. Their hot moments—two wins against SK, and a win each against SHC and Fnatic. Their cold moments—everything else.

Their last game against Fnatic in Week 5 was Millenium at their best. The day before, they took 10 kills in a brutal game against Gambit that saw the Russians win after staging a very lucky comeback. Then, they mowed down Fnatic, led by Creaton who threw down a 12.0 KDA. This is a team that has the skill to dominate, but seems to crumble at a moment’s notice. 

This rematch against Fnatic will be an important rebuilding step for both teams. Millenium need another win if they want to re-establish themselves in the LCS. And Fnatic, well, they need a win to avoid entering another disheartening losing streak.