by Patrick Garren
Game 1 promised to be a fireworks show as the first ever
Mid-Season Invitational opened with a classic showdown (from one of the events
it replaced, the Battle of the Atlantic .)
Fnatic entered picks and bans with a string of methodical Meta
picks from their previous games, which they then threw out of the
window, instead picking up as many TSM-favored champions as possible while banning out three top laners. Fnatic’s Huni brought Cassiopeia into the top lane for the first time of the season, and Marksman
Steeelback and
mid laner Febiven took Urgot and Leblanc respectively.
Game 2: SK Telecom vs Besiktas eSports
Besiktas came into this tournament as the winners of the
International Wild Card Invitational, and they entered this game as enormous
underdogs. On the other side of the
table, SK Telecom entered the tournament as massive favorites to win the entire
event, and are in the argument with EDG for
the best team in the world. The game started out with a bang in BJK’s favor, though,
as a pre-3 minute, 4-man gank squad showed up in Lee “Faker” Sang-hyeok’s lane
for an early first blood for BJK. However, the true mark of a great team comes
in their reaction to diversity, and SKT
reacted in the best way they could. Top, bot, and jungle all got advantages
over their corresponding lane partners, with several towers and a dragon
falling for SKT as a direct result of BJK’s
attention mid lane. The game was pretty much defined at 5 minutes when SKT
top laner Jang “MaRin” Gyeong-Hwan dove under BJK’s top tower, killing their
support Mustafa “Dumbledoge” Gokseloglu, who was still Level 2 due to the early roam, while a skirmish mid lane
gave SKT jungler Bae “bengi” Seong-ung a
double kill. A dragon fight at 14 minutes that eventually led to a 3 for 0 for SKT
as well as a second dragon kill gave SKT a
6k gold lead and dominant control of the game they would end only 12 minutes
later.
Game 3: Edward Gaming vs AHQ eSports Club
Game 3 saw an Asian clash between LPL Champions Edward
Gaming and LMS winners AHQ eSports club.
Edward Gaming were coming off an unimpressive playoff performance, while AHQ
saw a recent resurgence culminating in their 3-1 victory over Yoe Flash Wolves
during the LMS . With somewhat standard picks
and lanes outside of Lie “Westdoor” Shu-Wei’s mid lane Karthus pick, the first
bit of action came 5 minutes into the game with a counter gank from AHQ ending
in Kim “Deft” Hyuk-kyu giving up first blood and Westdoor getting a kill onto
his controversial Karthus pick. AHQ looked to be in control of the game until
disaster struck the Taiwanese side when a gank from AHQ jungler Xue
“ Mountain ”
Zhao-Hong was answered by a teleport from EDG
top laner Tong “Koro1” Yang, who got a double kill on his Hecarim while EDG
picked up a 4 for 2 fight in their favor. The game stayed generally even from
there, with EDG slowly pulling ahead into a
slight gold advantage. However, AHQ engaged onto Koro1 in mid lane, with Koro1
able to escape and recall before teleporting back into the fight with homeguards
to clean up for EDG , giving them a 3k gold
advantage. EDG extended their lead at the 25
minute mark with a strong engage in the red side jungle, acing AHQ and pushing
their lead to nearly 5k gold. From there, EDG
continued winning minor skirmishes and taking objectives, choking out AHQ’s
gold income before Koro1 helped lead EDG to
victory with his legendary Hecarim.
Game 4: Team Solomid vs Besiktas eSports
BJK and TSM both came off
of losses in their Game 1 matches and were desperate to put a check mark in the
W column. TSM picked up an incredibly
team-fight and wave clear oriented team comp, with BJK going for the double
control mage/lane bully carry roles. This game was largely uneventful early,
with the pure mechanical skill level advantage of TSM
being very apparent, as Dyrus and Bjergsen gained almost obscenely large CS
advantages over their lane counterparts. A roam bot lane from Santorin
and Bjergsen’s Ziggs ended in two kills, a turret, and a dragon for TSM .
BJK was down by 4k gold by 14 minutes, and for the second game in a row things
came completely unraveled for them in the mid game. TSM
systematically out-farmed, out-rotated, and out-played BJK at all facets of the
game, and would end the game in a mere 26 minutes.
Game 5: AHQ eSports club vs Fnatic
Fnatic were soaring after their domination of TSM
in the opening match of the event, but let’s be honest, that was hours ago, and
AHQ isn’t TSM . Fnatic really did seem to be
on to something with their pick ban strategy in Game 1, however they decided to
completely abandon that idea and went back to their boring, predictable
pick/ban selves. On the other side of the coin, Westdoor locked in Fizz, so
there’s that. Karthus and Fizz on one of the biggest stages you’ve ever been
on? I could be friends with this guy. AHQ started off strong and early, getting
first blood at 55 seconds on to Steelback, with a 2nd kill on the
Fnatic marksman coming minutes later. This game seemed relatively close all the
way up until the 20 minute mark, with Westdoor’s Fizz causing Fnatic tons of
problems and Huni’s Hecarim picking up the slack for Fnatic’s floundering bot
lane. AHQ began to pull ahead when a team fight initiated by Fnatic and Huni’s
teleport homeguard ended in Westdoor completely ruining Fnatic’s chances of
victory. His massive Fizz damage cleaned up the fight, and with a 4 to 0 team
kill advantage, AHQ took a second dragon and snowballed their lead into
a 31 minute victory over the European champions.
Game 6: SK Telecom vs Edward Gaming
This game was the most anticipated game of the tournament
for anyone who pays attention to the Asian League of Legends scene. The LCK champions
and the LPL champions, former world champion Heo “PawN” Won-seok and former LCK
all-star Deft facing SKT again for the first
time since leaving the Korean league after Season 4 Worlds. A lot of pride was
on the line for this game, as well as a considerable advantage at progressing
into the knockout stages of MSI . The most
notable pre-game event was Lee “Easyhoon” Ji-hoon being substituted in for SKT
at mid lane. While this is nothing out of the ordinary, I’m sure many fans
would have enjoyed watching the Faker vs Pawn mid lane matchup. EDG
managed to pick up first blood in the top lane on SKT
marksman Lee “Wolf” Jae-wan, but that would be one of their last hopeful
moments of the game. SKT reacted perfectly,
securing two kills on MaRin’s Rumble, with a teleport gank bot lane shortly
after leading to a 10 minute dragon kill. SKT
would systematically out-rotate EDG , taking 5
turrets and 3 dragons compared to 2 turrets and 0 dragons by the 25 minute
mark. A 10k gold lead by 30 minutes would result in a decisive SKT
victory, with many scratching their head over EDG ’s
poor performance.
Game 7: Besiktas eSports vs AHQ eSports
In the penultimate matchup of the night, AHQ looked to take
a quick win and move to 2-1 after the first day of games against Besiktas,
fresh off two harsh lessons in competitive League of Legends from the kings of
east and west. This game was easily BJK’s best outing of the day, in that they
weren’t completely dead in the water by the 15 minute mark. BJK managed to stay
relatively close for the first 20 minutes, but their inexperience and
mechanical deficiency against some of the best teams in the world continued to
rear its ugly head. Unable to turn an even game with a 2 dragon lead into
anything meaningful, Westdoor’s Twisted Fate began to systematically take over
the game. Every Destiny resulted in a kill or an objective, often both, and AHQ
took firm control of the game after the 25 minute mark. BJK can hold their
heads up high going into Day 2, however, as their decision making and early
game pressure looked better than it ever has in this game, and they pose a
definite threat to a pre-occupied team looking past them towards a tougher
matchup going into the second day. Can they take the torch from Kabum! eSports and knock a bigger power out of the tournament?
Game 8: SK Telecom vs Team Solomid
I want to take a moment, as a genuine fan of competitive
League of Legends, to thank whoever’s decision it was in the SKT
management to make sure that us Western fans got the matchup we wanted to see.
And while the game around it managed to be a relative shellacking, the
potential was at least there. But boy was this game a beatdown. SKT
held a 2k gold lead at 10 mnutes, and a 5k gold lead at 15 minutes. TSM
was never in this game, and SKT continued to
bolster their bid for the title of best team in the entire world, much less the
MSI trophy itself. This game, almost
agonizingly, lasted just over 30 minutes, with SKT
rounding up almost 30 kills before finishing the game with nearly a 20k gold
advantage.
Day 2 Scenarios
Day 2 poses plenty of interesting outcomes, and every team is still mathematically alive. It’s safe to say Besiktas is likely the first to be truly eliminated, and while maybe one day these play-in regions will have the resources to compete, unfortunately 2015 is not that time. Day 2 opens up with