GSL 2013 Season 1 Code S
Group B Recap
Ro32
Group C Preview
Sniper, HuK, Gumiho, Bomber
Brackets and results at Liquipedia
Ro32: Group B Recap
Results from Live Report Thread by Yello.
+ Show Spoiler [Results] +
Leenock vs TY
Leenock <Whirlwind SE> TY
Leenock < Cloud Kingdom > TY
Leenock <> TY
Leenock wins 2-0!
Curious vs MC
Curious <Cloud Kingdom> MC
Curious <Daybreak> MC
Curious <> MC
MC wins 2-0!
Winners' Match
Leenock <Akilon Flats> MC
Leenock <Daybreak> MC
Leenock <> MC
MC wins 2-0!
Losers' Match
Curious <Akilon Flats> Ty
Curious <Neo Planet S> Ty
Curious <Daybreak> Ty
Curious wins 2-1!
Final Match
Curious <Bel'Shir Vestige> Leenock
Curious <Daybreak> Leenock
Curious <> Leenock
X wins 2-0!
MC and Curious advance to Code S RO16!
Leenock <Whirlwind SE> TY
Leenock < Cloud Kingdom > TY
Leenock wins 2-0!
Curious vs MC
Curious <Cloud Kingdom> MC
Curious <Daybreak> MC
MC wins 2-0!
Winners' Match
Leenock <Akilon Flats> MC
Leenock <Daybreak> MC
MC wins 2-0!
Losers' Match
Curious <Akilon Flats> Ty
Curious <Neo Planet S> Ty
Curious <Daybreak> Ty
Curious wins 2-1!
Final Match
Curious <Bel'Shir Vestige> Leenock
Curious <Daybreak> Leenock
X wins 2-0!
MC and Curious advance to Code S RO16!
In Miraculous Fashion, the Boss Toss Returns
- SK_MC shows fine form to reach Ro16 after training with LG-IM
If the fans noticed that SK_MC was starting to fall off, then it's likely MC noticed it himself. It's no surprise, then, that MC decided to re-enter a team house for the first time since leaving oGs over a year ago, hunkering down at the LG-IM house to train for this season of the GSL. It already seemed like a wise decision when MC made it through his Up/Down group and into Code S, but it really paid dividends last night when MC had one of his best Code S performances in months. With a perfect score of 4 - 0, MC crushed Zergs FXOLeenock and ST_Curious to make it to the round of sixteen.
Three base timing attacks accounted for some of his wins, where his macro, micro, and overall game sense seemed better than ever. With CreatorPrime already out of the tournament, fans of his style of play could just watch MC's games and not miss much. But the highlight game for MC was a drawn out, macro game against Curious on Daybreak. Going up against the once-dreaded infestor-brood lord turtling tactic, MC turned to the sky-Protoss strategy that had failed so many times in the past and actually made it work. The nerfs to infested Terrans seemed to play a part as well, as they were more of a temporary meatshield than the slow-moving wall of death they were in the past.
The two times GSL champion has expressed his desire to match Nestea by getting a third, and by training with Nestea's team, he may very well reach his goal.
- FXOLeenock and 8th_BaBy play a fantastic game, but fail to reach the Ro16
Creator and Symbol had already played one of the finest games of 2013 in Group A, but FXOLeenock and 8th_BaBy combined to outdo them within a day (VOD of the game here). Facing each other in the first game of the night, they played an epic, hour long TvZ on Whirlwind that somewhat resembled one of the classic games of 2012, Ryung vs. DRG.
After a creative burrow roach opener from Leenock the game stabilized and went long. By masterfully abusing the immobility of brood lords, BaBy was able to chip away at Leenock's economy and infrastructure until nearly nothing was left. At the same time, Leenock managed to keep his core force together, and kept BaBy from securing the extra bases that would allow him win simply by spending more. A game that at one point saw nearly ten bases being mined from simultaneously eventually saw both players almost completely starved for resources, left with just the ragtag remnants of their once great armies.
It took a stroke of brilliance from Leenock to end the game. After setting a trap with burrowed infestors, Leenock lured BaBy into attacking his brood lords with vikings, only to fungal them all and remove BaBy's core air to air units. It was enough to give Leenock the deciding edge, and he won the game with a handful of infestors and a single brood lord remaining.
Unfortunately for the pair, they will have no more chances to entertain the fans in Code S. After dropping his first series to MC, the ever vigilant gatekeeper of Code S, ST_Curious resumed his role of casting unworthy back down to Code A. In the losers match, BaBy simply could not deal with Curious once he reached hive and brood lords. In the final match, Curious showed his long standing ZvZ prowess, taking one game with mass roaches and the other by defeating Leenock's brood lords and countering with his own. A frequent visitor to the Code S Ro16, Curious will see if he can finally break through into the Ro8 in the final season of WoL.
Ro32: Group C Preview
The champ is here! ... Arriving to what I imagine would be a chorus of raucous boos. From his Code S championship run, we can deduce the two things that MVP.Sniper hates the most: fan favorites, and fun. We saw him eliminate Polt, PartinG, Leenock, Ryung, and HyuN on his way to winning GSL Season Five, all the while playing a strong but unspectacular style of Zerg. No doubt, everyone had to admit that Sniper was an excellent player—but he just happened to play that race everyone hates, in the way everyone hates.
While Sniper hasn't fully embraced the villain identity (if he had, he would have told Ryung "The only thing that's imbalanced is our skill levels."), he still shows some anti-hero qualities. From his interviews, popularity doesn't really seem to be his concern as much as respect. He knows that some fans (and players) only see his race, and not his skill.
Thus, it's not surprising at all that he decided to pick EG.HuK.RC, (the finalists of the previous season can choose their initial opponents in the next season) one of the biggest fan favorites of the entire tournament, as his initial opponent. It won't help endear him to anyone to defeat such a player, but it's the safest way to making another Code S championship run, which will earn him the unconditional respect he desires.
HuK just hasn't been performing at a high level for a very long time, and it was a huge upset that he made it through his Up/Down group. The obvious comparison for HuK would be MaNa back in GSL season 4. Receiving an Up/Down seed, MaNa played surprisingly well on the day and qualified for Code S from second place in his group. However, MaNa was on a roll at that point, having won DreamHack Summer and being considered one of the best foreigners.
The better comparison is Suhosin, who also made it through the Up/Downs that season. Much like HuK, Suhosin doesn't really play an orthodox style in general, chose to all-in a lot in his Up/Down games, and needed a bit of tie-break luck to make it through his group in second place. More importantly, their post-group interviews were eerily similar, with both players seeming genuinely surprised that they had managed to make it to Code S. That's definitely not a good sign for a player going into the most difficult tournament in the world, and not surprisingly, Suhosin was quickly eliminated in last place in Code S (so was MaNa, by the way). You can't say things are looking up for HuK, but it's fitting that the foreigner with the most Code S experience of them all is back for one more fling as the GSL phases out Wings of Liberty.
The other matchup in the group features one of the less noticed rivalries in the GSL as FXOGuMiho takes on ST_Bomber. The pair have faced off nine times in their GSL careers, all the way from Code A, the Up/Downs, and to Code S. The record thus far favors Gumiho by quite a bit, with the FXO Terran having seven wins and just two losses against Bomber.
While Bomber's on and off capability to play like a championship player makes him intriguing in any tournament, this might be the most interesting he's been in a very long time. To rehash the rule of Bomber, it is: "Bomber will always disappoint," alongside its corollary "If Bomber does not disappoint, it is in order to set up a bigger disappointment later." It's not a slight on Bomber, it's just a well observed pattern over Bomber's career, where he plays awesome and goes on a deep runs in foreign tournaments and then crashes and burns in the GSL soon after.
Since November, Bomber has been on one of his best, most consistent runs in his career. He placed second at Lone Star Clash II, top four at both IPL5 and MLG Dallas, and then crushed his Up/Down group with a 4 - 0 score. While this would be reason to think "maybe he's finally figured out how to be consistent!" for fans of other players, Bomber fans have been burned too many times to be fooled. A let down seems almost inevitable, especially now that he is facing one of his worst opponents in the very first match. And yet, he has played so well in the past few months, it's impossible not to have the tiniest shard of optimism, a small hope that this could finally be the season.
Finally, there's Gumiho, another one of those players who wears the 'inconsistent' tag, though he's no where near as accomplished as Bomber in that regard. Besides one, excellent Ro4 run, Gumiho is locked into the Ro32 for Code S, routinely trouncing Up/Down and Code A opposition to make it back after each season's early elimination. Unlike other, similar players, there's a general feeling that Gumiho should (a silly, but inescapable word in sports) be doing better than that. Part of it is that his amazingly entertaining and chaotic style of play blinds us to his flaws. But a bigger part of it is that we've seen him come through in extraordinary circumstances against some of the best players in the world. 8 - 0 in GSTL finals tells you that Gumiho is a guy who could win a Code S championship. So many players have something to prove in this final WoL season, and Gumiho will be throwing his hat into that chaotic ring.
Overall thoughts and predictions:
This group all comes down to Bomber, the king of inconsistency. At his best, he could crush everyone and top the group. At worst, he could lose to HuK, who is one of the biggest underdogs in Code S history. With HuK having nary a chance, it's up to Bomber to supplant one of Gumiho or Sniper and make it into the top 16. Of the two, he would probably have a better chance against Sniper, a player whose ZvT—while strong—doesn't measure up to his ZvZ or ZvP abilities.
In the end, there's too much past precedent saying Bomber won't get it done, and I can't go against it. If he does somehow make it through, then it's ByuN's obligation to make it as well and face off in the Ro8.
Sniper > HuK
Gumiho > Bomber
Gumiho > Sniper
Bomber > HuK
Sniper > Bomber
Gumiho and Sniper advance.