Six months ago, the Intel Extreme Masters tournament at Gamescom Cologne came to a close. In the first major offline tournament in Starcraft 2's history, a global audience became familiar for the first time with the major players in the European scene and saw how up-and-comers, like Huk and DeMuslim, performed at their first SC2 live event. A major theme running through that tournament was imbalance: Morrow's 5 rax reaper play and his 3-1 win over Idra in the finals led to a 185-page thread on Team Liquid that was ultimately locked due to too much QQ. Additionally, for a tournament dubbed the "Global Challenge", the player list was very skewed towards Europeans: 13 players from the EU participated, 3 from the US, and zero from Korea.
In stark contrast to the tournament that ended half a year ago, the theme of the Intel Extreme Masters World Championship is balance. With five Europeans, three North Americans, three Koreans, and one Australian, this event will be the first ever offline SC2 tournament with a truly international composition. Furthering the theme, there are four Terran players, four Zerg players, and four Protoss players in attendance, with two of each race in each of the two groups. The games this weekend will be broadcast in English, German, Russian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, and Chinese. Most excitingly for English fans, the ESL has brought in a truly great trio of casters: Day[9], TheLittleOne, and Rotterdam, who will switch off on casting duties throughout the week.
The qualification method for this tournament involved ESL events all corners of the globe and granted fresh prominence to previously unknown casters and players alike. KellyMilkies, for example, was the main commentator for the IEM SEA qualifiers.
IEM Gamescom was the first great offline SC2 tournament, and the IEM World Championship looks to continue ESL's track record of excellence. This event will truly live up to its name. Get ready for an outstanding week of Starcraft 2 action!
Daily Schedule
March 1st -- Group A
March 2nd -- Group B
March 3rd -- Quarterfinals
March 4th -- Semifinals
March 5th -- Grand Finals
All streams are free in LQ, and will not use Octoshape.
March 1st -- Group A
March 2nd -- Group B
March 3rd -- Quarterfinals
March 4th -- Semifinals
March 5th -- Grand Finals
All streams are free in LQ, and will not use Octoshape.
![[image loading]](http://www.teamliquid.net/staff/motbob/esl.jpg)
Group A | Group B |
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1st | $13,000 |
2nd | $6,500 |
3rd | $4,000 |
4th | $2,500 |
5th/6th | $800 |
7th/8th | $400 |
9th/10th | $400 |
11th/12th | $400 |
The North Americans
![[image loading]](http://www.teamliquid.net/staff/motbob/nabanner.jpg)
Arguably the top three players from their region,



Qxc has similarly put out a steady stream of tournament wins and top finishes. After showing respectable results in MLGs, he won the second EG Master's Cup tournament in December, moved to Spain to study abroad, dropped by Assembly (only to get knocked out by

Idra, now that he has moved back to the States, is the best player outside of Korea. With consistently improving finishes in each GSL season, Idra proved that he can hang at the top in the most competitive SC2 scene in the world. Since winning the King of the Beta tournament, he's won every foreign tournament he's entered ( at least, he's won the ones that didn't have Kulas Ravine in the mappool. Come on, MLG!). We'll see if he can continue his success here at IEM.
The Europeans
The five European players,





The finals of IEM Europe featured two players, White-Ra and Sjow, who have taken radically different paths to get where they are. The winner of that finals, Sjow, was a 2v2 player in WC3 before taking up Starcraft 2, and has been wildly inconsistent in his short career. At one point, right after IEM Europe, he was able to confidently claim the title of top European Terran, and there were talks of him going to Korea to pursue a berth in Code A of GSL. But recently, Sjow has been on a major cold streak, losing to two unknown tosses in Assembly and to a Protoss named "Bubbles" in the FXOpen. He also wasn't able to qualify for TSL 3. Just yesterday, though, Sjow was able to beat EG.Axslav in a Bo7 showmatch, so there are signs that his TvP might be coming back to life.
The other finalist and the runner-up at IEM Europe was White-Ra, a fixture of both the SC:BW and SC2 communities. Only taking time off from crushing his enemies to get married, White-Ra has shown consistently excellent play. From his win of the HDH way back at the beginning of the beta, to his 3rd place finish at Blizzcon, to his 2nd place at IEM Europe, White-Ra has never given his fans reason to believe that he'll ever show anything but top-level Protoss play.
Morrow is perhaps the first player in Starcraft history to qualify for a massive tournament with one race and participate in it with another. His disassembly of Idra during IEM Cologne left the world screaming about Terran imbalance, yet Morrow switched races to Zerg shortly thereafter (claiming Terran was too easy in terms of mechanics), leading Idra to famously make the proclamation that if Morrow ever won a prize tournament with that race, he'd never say the word "balance" again. Multiple patches and several Terran nerfs later, that promise perhaps no longer holds any weight, but Idra's prediction seems to have taken the form of a curse: second place finishes in the SCreddit invitational, in Assembly, and in a TLopen mean that Morrow is likely itching to get the silver monkey off his back and win a major tournament with his new race. He's certainly got the skills to pull it off.
Frankly, I know nothing about Tarson, except that he was a SC:BW Terran who was brutally murdered by Nony during TSL 2. Check the comments of this story; Tarson fans may have written some facts about their favorite player if they aren't too busy yelling at me for being ignorant.
Socke rounds out the field, a top level Protoss with a few big money finishes under his belt. He isn't even supposed to be here at this tournament; he replaces DeMusliM, who is still suffering from his injury. Yet Morrow famously won IEM Cologne, even though he wasn't supposed to be there either (he replaced a player who had visa issues). Socke has history on his side, and having the EPS Germany title doesn't hurt, either.
Three Koreans and an Aussie
Amazingly, all four of these qualifiers were in Code A, and all four lost. $13,000 in prize money at IEM might be a worthy consolation prize, though.




Interview with Rotterdam
Hey! Thanks for doing this interview. Can you introduce yourself and tell us how you're involved with the IEM World Finals in Hannover?
Hai, of course. So my name is Kevin "RotterdaM" van der Kooi, a former professional Wc3 player and casted quite some tournaments as well, most famous ones would be GOMTV World Invitional 2008 and the WCG's 2008/2009/2010. Nowadays I'm working for ESL as their English mainly SC II Commentator, and since IEM is an ESL product, I'm obviously part of the process :D
In the regional championships for IEM, the map pool was simply the 9 Blizzard ladder maps. Has this map pool changed for the world championship?
Yes it changed a little bit, the system they use is the following: there are 7 maps (BS, DQ, Meta, LT, Scrap, Shakuras and XNC), both players have 2 vetoes in the groupstage and 1 in the playoffs since its Bo5 from there on. I have to say though I have absolutely 0 saying in that whatsoever, I'm not a league admin and they never ask for my opinion, unfortunately

How exactly will you be splitting casting duties with Day[9] and TLO?
We will rotate throughout the entire tournament, making sure no one gets too exhausted or whatsoever since the days are quite long ( we have to be there at the event every day at 7 AM haha - I don't think Dario knows this yet btw, will be unpleasant news I think


How do you think the three Koreans will perform against the best Europe and North America have to offer? Who among the Koreans do you think will do the best?
Very hard to say, I'm very excited to see them play and cast their games :D, I think they'll do fine but I don't expect 3 Koreans in the top 4 for instance, that would be a big surprise for me. I personally think Squirtle will perform best, was super impressed when I watched his games but I have to admit I'm not a super GSL insider. I'm focusing a lot on the European scene, so I'm just gonna let them pleasantly surprise me :D, of course as a former Wc3 player I'm looking very forward to see Moon, but it seems so far he's not really been able to make the difference in SC II

Give us one awesome detail about this tournament that we don't know already (like whether or not the dreaded Octoshape has been done away with!). If ESL has already announced everything, give us one thing you're personally really excited about.
Haha, No worries, we are not streaming via Octoshape anymore so that's nothing to worry about. For all news whatsoever just keep a close eye on the Intel Extreme Masters page but personally I have too much to look forward to :D. Casting with Day9 is of course an awesome experience and I think we'll do really well, it's nice that he has the ultimate Broodwar Background and I'm pretty much a Wc3 Veteran ( Okay I entered the pro scene in 2005 but that's quite a while already

Prediction time! Who do you think will make it out of each group?
Hard to make a proper prediction and I kinda don't like to do it since I'm one of the hosts for this tournament, but it would be a bit lame to back out so for one time I'll do it. My guess is that Idra wins group A with White-Ra and MorroW taking 2nd and 3rd, for Group B its a bit tougher because we are still not sure whether or not DeMuslim will be recovered from his elbow injury in time and unfortunately I don't think he will (Editor's Note:


Okay well, thanks for the interview! Good luck at the event!

Thanks to you <3
Whoever wins the Intel Extreme Masters World Championship will be a top class player, because we only have top class players in the lineup! Whatever happens, I know it will be spectacular. Enjoy the games!
Thanks to Pholon for making the interview with Rotterdam possible.