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seraphineprobuilds · 3 years
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REGRET, CHANGE, AND THE CHASE FOR CLOUD9
Summer is a period where everything things, and right now what's Cloud9.
The largest storylines entering Summer would be Doublelift's yield to TSM and push against each team to close the substantial gap which Cloud9 created at the Spring. Following is a peek at a couple of things driving these groups and how that intersects with all the new-format Seraphine Probuilds which allows you reverse all of your Spring failures.
SAME OLD DOUBLELIFT
Nowadays, a great deal of people I speak to mention the fantastic mental exhaustion most of us seem to confront. It may make otherwise simple tasks such as folding laundry or going to the supermarket feel like scaling a mountain. That small voice which asks"does anything even matter?" Is, to me, among those unlucky backdrops of summertime. And when Uzi declared his retirement, I felt sorrow for the way his body withered down even though he is just in his 20s. However, I thought of a number of the famous images of himlike the one where he's hunched in front of a TV in tears because he sees the group that just beat him give a winner meeting. I thought of the headlines that followed every collapse. And I thought about this immense mental relief which must have accompanied the physical pain of slipping.
We're quick to discuss the physical aspect of this game and slow or completely prevent it if the psychological aspect comes to perform with. I inquired Doublelift around Uzi and concerning the gap in reception to somebody being physically drained and being emotionally tired, and he states,"You can't really argue with physical exhaustion because there's literally a limit before your body gives out. But if it's mental exhaustion, a lot of people can view it as a copout when you say 'I'm burnt out' or I mentally don't have the gall, drive, or motivation right now. People will just say, 'Suck it up.' It just seems a lot less real because it can be used as a copout for someone who's just not playing well, but I think -- as someone who's obviously experienced it -- very real."
He proceeds,"Someone like Uzi, who I respect a ton, I think he must have experienced both honestly. I don't think it was only purely physical. You can't really be giving it that same level of pure dedication the entire time. There's going to be times where he's mentally exhausted too."
What is going to happen today that Doublelift has returned into TSM is that the largest spotlight will glow. I really don't expect folks to look at him with compassion for shooting his foot off the pedal at the spring -- he's confessed it to be a mistake and apologized for this. It doesn't change what happened, however, so individuals do not need to take the apology. That is fine, also. I really don't anticipate the story to be more forgiving now that he's returned and left to TSM. If anything it is going to be vicious. I really don't anticipate them to be the exact same championship-caliber staff the last time that he had been here, but I do not anticipate that mild to dim once.
I really do believe him when he says that he had been coping with burnout last divide. I really do believe that he did not just suddenly drop off a cliff into a stage where he could no more come back to being the best player in the league, and I believe him if he tells me,"I realized in this transition to TSM, the thing I really want and what makes me really excited is the thought of winning with this roster." I feel that winning fixes all -- if just because people are quick to overlook.
Nonetheless, there's absolutely no delusion like the previous time that he joined TSM he is the victim . With much more championships than hands on a hand, his livelihood can end now and he would be the single most decorated player in the history of this league. I am not requesting compassion for him. He is not either. I am simply considering sorrow and all of the ways it can attest. A group towards a participant's death, or vice versa. An entire profession of missteps or what-if measures. I'm considering how some folks, such as Doublelift, are granted opportunities. A lot of that he got and others he didn't. Some, such as Uzi at this time, aren't. And I think, if they're"fair" or not, Doublelift consistently does something with his or her chances. That is why they keep coming.
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TESTIMONIALS
Spring Split's Cloud9 submitted a cumulative 26-2 document, which had been the very best in LCS history. I requested players from each team to provide me their ideas on C9:
"In my mind, there were only three teams that were that far ahead of everyone else. It would be Immortals in 2016 with Huni and Reignover, TSM in 2016 Summer, and then Cloud9 [now]. It's really exciting because there's actually a real challenge -- an attainable goal as an underdog now, and it makes me really motivated to practice." -- Doublelift
"I think Cloud9 during the Spring Split was just on a different level from all the other teams, including us. We just didn't understand the fundamentals as well as they did. They just really understood how they wanted to play the game, and towards the end of the split we struggled with how we wanted to play it." -- Svenskeren
"I think for C9 compared to every other team, they have a proper coaching staff and know how to play as a five man unit. They help each other, whereas other teams have people who don't improve during the split." -- Johnsun
"Everything we do needs to ask --'Is what we're doing great enough to conquer C9?' We have to compare everything we do to if it will matter against C9, because that's the level of competition we need to strive to every day, and if we do that for the entire split, then we have a really good chance to win." -- Solo
"Cloud9 has Top 2 players in every role -- they're all good individually. They're just a team that's willing to sacrifice for each other. They have a really solid team identity where they play around mid/jungle and transition that to bot lane. Licorice is really good at weak side and strong side -- they're just really well-rounded and play well as a team." -- FBI
"I feel like we kind of went blow for blow with them in our last game of the Spring Split, but I'm pretty sure they're a step ahead, even right now. They're all just individually really good and really smart about what they want to do. Their teamwork is really good and they're just hot right now." -- Pobelter
"I think all of C9's players are motivated and have the same end game. When you look at even the Solo Queue rankings, most of them are Top 10 [or at least high]. It's still pretty difficult to hit Rank 1 [especially] and I think Zven has a really good mentality when he plays Solo Queue. He always tries hard and plays to win -- a lot of people, even for me, if something goes bad I sometimes quit in Solo Queue. But I think it's a good mindset to put 100% into winning and think each game matters. You need to have that same mentality for scrims as well." -- Altec
"I definitely felt like C9 was way more dominant than every other team. I don't know if they were more dominant than us when we were winning, but it definitely felt like they were head and shoulders above every other team. Playing against them was a struggle because they played so fast and they were all on the same page -- they had really good coordination when it came to everything." -- Jensen
"From what we've heard from the players, they have a really good system. They have gym everyday, healthy food, and apparently even a book club -- they do all these different wellness things. A good esports system doesn't need to be too complicated -- it just needs to have health, exercise, and a good practice schedule." -- Stunt
"I would prefer if there was someone in the league who could actually [challenge us]. All of these teams are saying they are going to do it or that's what they're looking for, but honestly they're just not good enough. At least not yet. They're pretty much all talk. Hopefully they'll be able to perform better and actually be able to contend against us -- that's what I really want. It'd be good for us to go into Worlds with another team that we can learn from throughout the split." -- Blaber
BE THE CHANGE
"This is actually the first team I've been on in my entire career that has kept the same roster twice in a row, and I've been playing for years," states Stunt. "Just the smallest roster change can throw team synergy out the window -- a good example recently was TL with the introduction of Broxah over Xmithie. I felt like Xmithie kept their playstyle of playing around bottom. They had a clear identity and they were good at what they did, and without Xmithie, they're kind of lost and trying to find themselves again."
He's"For us, the benefit of keeping the same roster is you don't have to start from the basics. With just one new member, that new member has to learn all of your systems from square one, whereas we already have our systems in place for how we like to play the game, and all we have to do is build on it and figure out what the problems are with what we are doing right now. We have a really strong baseline."
I have spent a great deal of time this offseason considering when and how roll changes make sense -- lots of it comes off the heels of, as Stunt said, what occurred to TL. 1 thing I've always thought to be accurate and is endorsed by outcomes is that really great teams -- I am speaking about individuals who triumph Worlds or could/should have won Worlds (hello, ROX lovers ) -- have more or less been dominant from the instant moment they had been shaped. Occasionally they fade and wither away, sure, but they do not begin by fighting.
What we have from the LCS at this time is 1 group in Cloud9 who had been assembled this past year and instantly destroyed the competition from the gate. A good deal of people suggested the LCS was complete weaker from the Spring, however, the league as a whole was not that bad -- that they were all obviously worse than Cloud9. So just how are you supposed to close the gap with no daring change (such as a roster movement ) if C9 is constantly advancing too? Regrettably, there is no actual guarantee a roster change will get the job done. I really don't have stats on this but I guess the likelihood of getting worse are also fairly large, particularly if you were a good team to start with (2nd place FLY who didn't change, as an instance, has far more space below them than previously ).
Not altering a roster allows you build foundational blocks for exactly what a fantastic procedure and routine is -- both for daily rituals such as sleeping and eating (which players have a tendency to fail ) and also for in-game matters such as how much you desire to reevaluate ancient scuttle control or the way you wish to reevaluate counterpick when drafting. There simply is not a definitive answer to whether you should or should not alter a roster. Finally if a roster change was bad or good will come down to the consequences -- that is how we have always guessed them, if that is reasonable or not.
Liquid, by way of instance, was memed fairly difficult for falling if they earned Broxah (then Tactical, then again if Doublelift returned), making you believe that they made the incorrect move. But that is just in a vacuum in which their aim was to win the LCS again. In the larger context of needing to acquire Worlds, possibly they had struck their ceiling Xmithie -- at the point you must create a change regardless of how it ends up. Only by risking becoming worse will you get much better. The needle has changed considerably for Liquid, however, after only 1 split. Doublelift is gone for good, and that's their lengthy perch atop the LCS.
Jensen states,"Being the team that always wins or is expected to win doesn't feel as good. It's hard to stay on top because within NA, it's hard to learn a lot from the practice because even if you lose, you think,'Oh, we are better than those. This was just an off day.' I think a lot of my teammates felt that last split. We were too comfortable with our position. This time around, I can't imagine we'll make the same mistake because we realize we're just like any other team right now. We shouldn't feel ahead of them. We'll start playing more like the underdog and playing with the mindset that we have to learn from any team because we just had a 9th place finish."
All it requires is 1 split to completely alter your strategy. Pobelter, by way of instance, did not have a group at the start of past split and lovers (who formerly clamored for his benching) discovered it to be totally outrageous that he did not have work. He then came in to get a dead-last CLG group and has been showered with possibly more compliments than at any point in his profession. He explained,"I have not felt better than those few scanty little wins we got last split. Those were some great hits of dopamine." That is crazy for me to place those unnecessary wins on precisely the exact same amount as the championships he had won previously, but I do not doubt it for a moment.
Everybody wants to win even when their motives for needing it are likely to disagree, and in sport which means somebody else will lose. It's this simultaneous moment in which you secure your fantasy by denying somebody else, just as climbing to the starting lineup for a single player usually means another player needs to step down. This split will comprise nine teams jumping as large as they can to reach Cloud9, and when I will be honest with you, I really don't think any of them are going to make it.
However, Summer has ever been the split at which you are able to correct all of your Spring wrongs, also this season that's even more conspicuous. Nothing you did at the Spring things in the meaning that the things do not bring about Worlds placements in any way. And yet, still, that which you did things. Or everything you did not do. Nobody could tell Doublelift the Spring Split which saw him depart for TSM did not matter, even though he sang a different song at the beginning of it. Nobody could tell Cloud9 the dominance they embodied and heard does not matter because of their Summer planning. Even though, by creating the Summer yours and yours, you may earn all that irrespective of. There's only this, right today.
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seraphineprobuilds · 3 years
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Five of the Best Champion Picks, Plays, and Stats from Week 8 of This LEC Summer Season
After a Mad superweek, the Summer Season is now over. Here are the top choices, stats, and plays from Week 8.
Following eight months of intense activity, the League of Legends European Championship 2020 Summer Season has come to a close. This year was among the most exciting regular seasons in LEC history, together with upsets galore, fresh challengers for the throne, along with an unbelievable last-minute playoff series from among the league's underdog teams. That is correct, FC Schalke 04 came from a 1-10 record to qualify for the Summer Playoffs with seven consecutive wins.
G2 Esports, meanwhile, have been on the cusp of not qualifying for playoffs following a disappointing start to the year, but redeemed themselves at the last couple weeks to cement a third place finish. MAD Lions and Rogue were tied to the majority of the year, but at the last two weeks, Rogue managed to greatest MAD Lions and assert the initial seed, which qualifies them for this season's World Championship. Excel Esports almost forced it to the playoffs, but fell at the final hurdle, which intended Fnatic maintained one of the end playoffs spots rather.
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With the LEC gearing up for playoff, here would be the very best stats, plays, and selections from the last week of playwith. 86: Caps' kills after the regular season Win or lose, Caps is a monster.
While G2 Esports weren't looking great at the beginning of the season, Rasmus "Caps" Winther was always performing, even when the team lost. Caps is consistently one of the best players on the Rift, and he's clocked up 86 kills throughout the Regular Season, tying with Rogue's Emil "Larssen" Larsson for the most this season. It's easy to shine as a player if you're always winning like G2 were in spring or in 2019. It becomes a lot harder to look good if you're not. Yet, Caps is the player that, even when behind, keeps making plays.
Caps hit the highest Creep Score per minute at 11.7 in his game against SK Gaming this week -- that's the highest all weekend, out of every player in the league. In that same game, he also dished out 32.5 percent of all the damage that G2 Esports unleashed onSK Gaming. It's no secret that G2 Esports will do everything they can to get Caps ahead, because if Caps gets an early gold lead, he carries. Abbedagge's Corki: 12/1/6 vs MAD Lions Fakerdagge carries Schalke 04 into the playoffs.
While all eyes were on Erberk "Gilius" Demir this weekend, the man that made FC Schalke 04's miracle run happen was Felix "Abbedagge" Braun. Against Team Vitality, he played one of the best Zoe games of the season, but that wasn't even his best performance. With Schalke 04 up 2-0, MAD Lions were waiting for them at the playoffs gates. This was the moment when the entire team had to step up: the last win against Europe's top-performing team was necessary to get that miraculous sixth seed.
Abbedagge started strong, picking up an early solo-kill against Marek "Humanoid" Brázda's LeBlanc. With some early magic resistance, the lane suddenly became a lot easier for Schalke 04's midlaner -- which allowed him to roam. In the above clip, this is when he started to shine. Abbedagge used his Corki Package offensively and kept racking up kills. After picking up a Quadra Kill, Schalke rallied around the dragon for a final team fight to win the game. With some good positioning, Abbedagge picked off Humanoid again, which allowed the rest of the team to secure the dragon, win the fight, and win the game.
With Abbedagge back in form, Schalke 04's dreams of making it to Worlds could become a reality in the next few weeks -- and after sitting in last all season. Hans sama's Aphelios: 12/2/3 vs MAD Lions Hans Sama comes in clutch to secure Rogue's first seed.
Aphelios was hit with the nerf bat quite significantly over the last couple of patches. The moments where he solo-kills entire teams seem to be a thing of the past now. But, with four bot lane bans, Rogue still seemed fine to pick up the hyper carry for Steven "Hans sama" Liv. As it turns out, Aphelios is still able to carry fights if he gets a couple of kills under his belt.
Winning this game would mean that MAD Lions would lock in their Worlds ticket as the first seed of the regular season. Even when they were five thousand gold behind, they were still trying their hardest to win. Ultimately, it came down to the final team fight above, where Rogue were able to split MAD Lions' focus between the dragon and their Nexus. When most audiences had their eyes fixed on the Nexus, Hans sama had been playing out his heart to make certain that MAD Lions could not return to their own base to shield. Having a Triple Kill, the Rogue bot laner ensured Rogue's success. 66 percentage: Trick's Sett Win Rate Trick reveals he's among the Greatest Setts from the LEC.
Kim"Trick" Gang-yun was the very first man to select Sett into the jungle at the LEC. After picking up wins at the first week of the Summer Season, clubs needed to begin banning Sett since they did not understand how to deal with him effectively. Together with the new winner under his belt, Trick began to enhance and play proved to be a not so distant target for SK Gaming.
The largest change in regards to Trick's playstyle is he is more active about the map. A winner like Sett provides him more service to pull off ancient ganks with Hexflash and be tanky later on in the match. SK Gaming's strategy revolves round Juš"Crownshot" Marušič carrying them via late-game team battling. With the majority of the gold moving to Crownshot (27.9% ), Trick is simply left with the ordinary gold talk of 15.9 percent. However, with Trick's excellent counter ganks and vision management, he's nevertheless a driving factor supporting SK Gaming's success. Selfmade's Kha'Zix: 7/0/8 vs Excel Esports Selfmade provides a Kha'Zix masterclass.
Fnatic needed to pick up a win this week to turn it in the playoffs. If they did not, it'd be the very first time in the history of this organisation they wouldn't seed themselves. With the stakes higher than ever before, they began off the week with a reduction against Schalke 04. Winning against Excel Esports has been the very first step in procuring their playoffs position by head-to-head rules. With their backs against the walls, Oskar"Selfmade" Boderek stepped up and transported Fnatic into the fourth seed.
Kha'Zix is among the only real assassin junglers from the meta at the moment. The issue with assassins is they must get ahead to have an effect in the future in the sport. With a few fantastic pathing, Selfmade procured First Blood from the bot lane that began the snowball. The early guide assisted him invade and that he immediately gained a degree lead within the enemy jungler, which made the distinction in procuring objectives in later struggles across the dragon and Baron. Because of this, Fnatic secured their place in the match, while Excel missed out.
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seraphineprobuilds · 3 years
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The Penta - Top Plays | Aiming for a Pentakill
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