SPOTV Starleague 2015 Season 1
Maru
A Reversal of Roles
Dream
A Reversal of Fortunes
Brackets and standings on Liquipedia
Starleague
Maru: A Reversal of Roles
It's quite remarkable how similar
However with the launch of Heart of the Swarm Maru finally started climbing. He qualified for Code S and played an exciting set of series vs

It looked like he had finally come into his own, but Maru's tale had seemingly passed its zenith so soon. Despite qualifying and doing well in many events—the WCS Season 2 Final, WCS Korea Season 3, WCS Season 3 Final, 2013 Blizzcon—he was repeatedly denied another championship. His fortunes should have changed when he was picked up by Jin Air in December 2013, but alas a title in 2014 escaped his grasp as well. Even though we still remember him for his single title and his incredible games, the year and a half of disappointment has eroded his aura of a champion. His recent losses to
If it were any other young terran with these results we would be calling him a rising star, but Maru attained his peak too soon and has been unable to reach as high ever since. He's maintained his place among the game's elite, but he has faltered to either a rising star or the eventual champion in many of his tournaments. He has been unable to find ways around adversity, a surprising fact considering the way he wrestled INnoVation and Rain to the ground in his title winning run. That championship should have marked the beginning of a legacy, but that legacy has stalled.
Unlike his opponent, Maru has no choice but to win. Anything else would be considered a bitter disappointment. Based on his bracket stage performance, Maru appears impossible to stop. He demolished Leenock in a TvZ clinic, barely breaking out a sweat. Against Stats in the semi finals, the normally secure protoss crumpled under the pressure of Maru's drops and runbys. The Jin Air Ace displayed the talents that have made him a broad favorite for most of the tournaments he enters, and form, at least in NSSL, is on his side. He's the defending champion of Starleagues, in a sense, and the title appears his for the taking.
Strange then, how this appears so familiar: could he be the Rain to Dream's Maru from 2013? He is the established star, the title holder, the best in class. He faces a precocious talent awaiting to fulfill his potential; a phenom that defeated the best player in the world to get this far. It's a reversal of roles for Maru, but could it also be a reversal of fortunes? This is as close as he's come to a Korean title in years, and this is his chance to deserve the accolades placed upon him. The story has changed since 2013: a new team, a new role, a new Starleague. Yet his goal remains the same.
All he has to do is win.
Dream: A Reversal of Fortunes
Dream’s path to relevancy was far less recognized and fulfilling than his opponent’s. Although he was one of the youngest players that made it to Code A in the first year of Starcraft II, Dream failed to take advantage of his position as potentially one of the next greats and was instead overshadowed by more adept competitors who took over and became the standard. Dream had flashes of brilliance that allowed him to occasionally beat the very best—who can forget his upset against
Failure in the GSL led to a drop in activity in Korea, and Dream started to try his luck abroad. He started finding success at the end of WoL, beginning with a second place finish at IEM Katowice in early 2013. Yet this lone tournament run failed to inspire anything more than a single, short-lived Code S qualification later that year. Meanwhile, in the Acer Teamstory Cup, Dream became a key player for MVP; his 18-10 record was capped off by five wins against Acer in the playoffs. One of his defining victories, against
After a promising start to HotS, 2014 was a letdown in multiple ways. After missing out on 2014’s first Code S by the slimmest of margins, Dream failed to re-qualify for the rest of the year. A lack of other individual league results, combined with MVP’s withdrawal from the ATC, meant that Dream’s only real results came from miscellaneous qualifiers and Proleague. His Proleague record across four rounds was only 6-6, and he was frequently rotated in and out of MVP’s lineup, trading spots with
As such, it seemed like a surprise and a colossal mismatch when Dream joined SKT and then managed to qualify for both of 2015’s premier Korean events. His NSSL challenger opponent,
Dream destroyed him. Playing a fairly active TvZ style, Dream patiently ran up a 2-0 lead on the back of excellent textbook play. His style was additionally distinctive, as he continuously saved thors from near-certain death with medivacs, and one of 2014’s breakout players looked like the clearly inferior player. Even though Solar managed to avoid a 3-0 by repelling Dream’s drops in one game, Dream hardly looked troubled as he took the fourth map in a similar way. While he managed to squeak through his GSL group, attention on Dream was centered around his NSSL run, as he followed up his victory by topping a group of death including
![[image loading]](http://www.teamliquid.net/staff/Jer99/2015/NSSL/dream1.jpeg)
Many veterans of the scene who finally achieve a playoff run in a league such as WCS or GSL quickly succumb for one reason or another, whether it’s due to nerves, a mental block, or just running into a championship contender. Dream, instead of following suit, has instead re-enacted Maru’s lost OSL run. After dismantling a mid-tier player in the Ro8, both players found themselves facing the strongest player in the world—Maru was challenged by a dominant
Even though Dream has already far exceeded everyone’s expectations in this tournament, losing in the finals would still be a disappointment. His run’s parallels to Maru’s in the OSL two years ago are striking, and he faces similar odds going into this finals. If Maru defeats Dream, not only does Maru show that he is the superior of the two, but Dream also fails to become anything that Maru became. By taking the match, Dream won’t necessarily be Maru’s equal historically, but he would emerge as another successful prodigy from the early stages of Starcraft II and would become a newer, different version of Maru, able to stand by himself as one of the best players in the world.
Prediction
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