GSL Season One
Code A
Group I & J Recaps
Group L & K Previews
Brackets and standings on Liquipedia
Partial VODs on YouTube
Mechin' it Happen
by lichter and Waxangel
▲UP: Stats, SuperNoVa ▼DOWN: CoCa, TheBest
Detailed results from: live report thread.+ Show Spoiler [Click for detailed Results] +
SuperNova vs CoCa
SuperNova <Polar Night>
CoCa
SuperNova <Daedalus Point>
CoCa
SuperNova <>
CoCa
SuperNova wins 2-0!
TheBest vs Stats
TheBest <Yeonsu>
Stats
TheBest <Frost>
Stats
TheBest <>
Stats
Stats wins 2-0!
Winners' Match
SuperNova <Habitation Station>
Stats
SuperNova <Heavy Rain>
Stats
SuperNova <Frost>
Stats
Stats wins 2-1!
Losers' Match
CoCa <Habitation Station>
TheBest
CoCa <Yeonsu>
TheBest
CoCa <>
TheBest
CoCa wins 2-0!
Final Match
SuperNova <Frost>
CoCa
SuperNova <Alterzim Stronghold>
CoCa
SuperNova <>
CoCa
SuperNova wins 2-0!
Stats and
SuperNova advance to Code S!
TheBest and
CoCa fall back to Code B!
TheBest vs Stats
Winners' Match
Losers' Match
CoCa wins 2-0!
Final Match
Up to Heaven:
Carriers vs mech. Seriously. If there is one thing that you need to know about Group J, that's it. Stats brushed a woeful TheBest aside in his initial match to face SuperNova with advancement to Code S on the line, and the series ended up being one of the most interesting of 2014 so far. We saw a carrier-centric build TWICE, in games 1 and 3, to counter SuperNova's equally unconventional mech play against Protoss. We don't know what was stranger: the fact that SuperNoVa tried to mech against Protoss TWICE, or that Stats had actually seen mech so much beforehand that he had a counter build in place. Unfortunately for SuperNoVa, the games weren't even close as he got crushed by a strategy he had never seen before. While everyone is complaining about the number of Protoss players in Code S, you can't deny that Stats made it through in style.
Stats' Reward: The love and adoration of every fan ever, and an LR thread where Protoss advanced without balance whine. A true hero.
Advancing in second place was SuperNova, whose afternoon was just as memorable as Stats'. Clearing out CoCa in 2 straight sets, he'd use the same mech opening and composition in all four games. With CoCa unable to deal with early hellion harassment, the Azubu Terran saw no reason to diverge from his hellion-reaper openers. Harassment wasn't SuperNoVa's only strong suite, with his late game macro looking on point as well. Not one to play standard, SuNo would also go mech against Stats in the Winner's Match, but lose both games due to Carriers. However, he did take a map off Stats with a curious factory-float build, followed by a strong SCV pull timing to crush Stats' phoenix-colossus composition. Both Stats and SuperNoVa looked to be a level above TheBest and CoCa, and they ended the group quickly, giving Wolfdor some time to rest before the evening matches.
SuperNova's Reward: The title of "Mech Hero" for using mech vs Protoss and on Frost and Alterzim vs Zerg
Back Down to Hell:
Oh, TheBest, this was your chance to redeem yourself and finally become a hero. But with your trademark sloppy control, you failed at your attempts to do early damage in every single game he played. We saw TheBest Reaper Control, TheBest Banshee Control, and TheBest Hellion control let down Terran fans everywhere. Back down to Code B with you!
TheBest's Penance: Continues to be TheBest.
Ouch. Despite winning against a poor and outmatched TheBest, CoCa failed to learn from his mistakes as he was crushed 0-4 by SuperNova using one build order on any map they played on. It didn't matter if it was Frost, Daedalus, or Alterzim – CoCa still failed to defend against harassment and failed to counter SuperNova's mech army. It was a very poor performance from CoCa who insisted on defending early with lings against hellion reaper and used roach hydra the entire game against mech. He did win against TheBest, but honestly, it didn't count for much.
CoCa's Penance: Go to a sleazy bar with ByuN and lament their careers.
▲UP: DongRaeGu, Sora ▼DOWN: Hack, Reality
Detailed results from: live report thread.+ Show Spoiler [Click for detailed Results] +
Reality vs Sora
Reality <Yeonsu>
Sora
Reality <Heavy Rain>
Sora
Reality <Frost>
Sora
Sora wins 2-1!
Hack vs DongRaeGu
Hack <Alterzim Stronghold>
DongRaeGu
Hack <Yeonsu>
DongRaeGu
Hack <>
DongRaeGu
DongRaeGu wins 2-0!
Winners' Match
Sora <Habitation Station>
DongRaeGu
Sora <Yeonsu>
DongRaeGu
Sora <>
DongRaeGu
DongRaeGu wins 2-0!
Losers' Match
Reality <Habitation Station>
Hack
Reality <Heavy Rain>
Hack
Reality <>
Hack
Hack wins 2-0!
Final Match
Sora <Frost>
Hack
Sora <Daedalus Point>
Hack
Sora <>
Hack
Sora wins 2-0!
DongRaeGu and
Sora advance to Code S!
Reality and
Hack fall back to Code B!
Hack vs DongRaeGu
Winners' Match
Losers' Match
Final Match
Up to Heaven:
The ever inconsistent DongRaeGu had one of his good days in Code A, going 4-0 to top the group and return to Code S. All in all it was a solid performance, though not one for fans of the original dong to get too excited about. DRG looked good as he took out Hack with muta-ling-bane, but it would be better to reserve judgment on his ZvT until he faces more difficult opponents. Against Sora, DRG was unable to test himself against the CJ Protoss' formidable late game play, using a speedling all-in to get ahead early in game one while holding off a soul train to take game two.
DongRaeGu's Reward: Gets to give Sniper a hard staredown.
Sora's mini-slump continued as he had to struggle to get out of his Code A group. Though he looked like a future top Protoss back during his WCG runs, recent Proleague performances revealed he is still a work in progress. Though his play on the evening could have used some refinement, Sora was still able to brute force his way Hack and Reality in the PvT late game to take his Code S spot.
Sora's Reward: The hype train continues for now.
Back Down to Hell:
Hack might have immediately found himself regretting the decision to switch regions from America to Korea. He was guaranteed $2000 for his Ro32 seed in WCS America, and his Code A elimination will only net him around $660. Taking flights, lodging, and taxes into consideration, it's already something of a wash.
Hack's Penance: Wistfully watch WCS America VODs.
Not much went right for Reality as he went out of the group in last place. That's all we can say, really.
Reality's Penance: Practice more TvP with Stork.
Coming Up Next: Groups L and K
Group L: Savage, Dark, Seed, Pet
Friday, Jan 24 4:30am GMT (GMT+00:00)Group L is a collection of has-beens and never-weres. On the one side a former champion seeks a return to prominence, haunted by ghosts of better times. On the other are three young Zergs who have showed enough promise (and failures) to be mildly interesting. The fights here won’t be inherently interesting but such groups are never about the games themselves. Tonight we’ll have the opportunity to judge whether they will become historical footnotes or future pillars of the scene.
Out of the remaining StarTale interns who haven’t broken out,
Snazzy name changes are a sign of desired change. Whether
It’s fortunate that
In the battle of appropriately edgy names,
…he’s pretty good too. Go watch his Proleague games.
Predictions: In such a lopsided group, you’d expect Vengeance to get a distinct advantage in preparation. This would be reassuring if Seed 2.0 was a strong PvZ player. But besides a victory over Life in GSTL (not an accomplishment these days), he has not shown the consistency to exploit this loophole. The dearth of non-mirror matchups will make things wonky for all three zergs. Pet is notoriously bad in ZvZ when confronted with an audience while Rogue oscillates between looking great and looking lost. Dark looks like a lock based on records but one should never conflate online results with possible offline results. This group really boils down to whoever can maintain their focus despite the terrible implications of the new format.
Rogue and Seed advance.
Group K: Hydra, Dream, Ryung, TRUE
Friday, Jan 24 9:30am GMT (GMT+00:00)A strong group on paper, further inspection shows that Group K is filled with players in varying stages of slumping. Despite being more famous than a lot of other Code A combatants, all of the members of this group will be desperate to make it to Code S to remind everyone of their talents.
The first player in the group is also the person experiencing the greatest decline.
He faces
Speaking of the Axiom Terran,
Known for his hesitance to get up to Hive tech,
Predictions: Hydra doesn't look close to getting out of his slump, and with only Terrans and Zergs in this group, it looks like trouble for the CJ man. If he can find a way to face TRUE, he may have a shot at winning a series, but it looks grim for him. The Jin Air Zerg on the otherhand will hope to face two Terrans in a row and use his baneling heavy ZvT to advance in first. Second place will likely be fought for between Dream and Ryung, and the latter's slightly-not-as-bad TvT (and history of being good at it once upon a time) gives him an edge to squeak out Group K.
TRUE and Ryung to advance.

