WCS America - Season 3
Ro16: Group A ResultsJaedong and Heart advance
Ro16: Group B PreviewBrackets and standings on
LiquipediaVODs on Youtube
Jaedong and Heart advance to Ro16The live portion of WCS America started off with a huge upset, as Liquid's
TaeJa failed to advance to the quarter-finals. In his stead, it was Axiom's
Heart who ended a long stretch of poor form in 2013 and re-entered the championship picture. The two faced off in an elimination match for the 2nd place spot in the group, and Heart's sharp TvT proved strong enough on the night to topple Liquid's crown prince.
Meanwhile, previous WCS AM runner-up
EG.Jaedong rolled comfortably along, taking the first place spot in this group with wins over Heart and TaeJa.
Unfortunately for fans of foreigners, Taiwan's
Sen ended up coming in last place in the group. Though Sen showed managed to take a map off both Heart and TaeJa, a lack of finesse against widow mines ultimately saw him eliminated from the tournament.
EG.Oz,
iG.MacSed,
Acer.Scarlett,
LG-IM_NesTeaby WaxangelGiven the fame and recognition all four of these players receive, it's surprisingly hard to say anything definitive about this group.
For one,
Acer.Scarlett came back from a three week break at the beginning of October. She claimed to have barely gotten in any practice, but still managed to managed to take out puCK and CranK to advance from her Ro32 group. Is she just so talented that she can get by players on minimum practice, or is she the next coming of Mondragon (a former Acer Zerg who was famous for mind-gaming his opponents about his actual skill level)? In any case, she's had two solid weeks to practice since her return to active duty, so North American fans have plenty of reason to keep their hopes up for another good performance.
Then there's the other Zerg, the legendary
LG-IM_NesTea. For a couple of years now, he's been an incredible difficult player to rate. At times he's looked completely washed up and done, and at times he's looked like he could scratch Code S again if he wanted. You would think that his
recent wedding would have sent him into another spell of poor form, but he's actually been doing rather well as of late. It's true that he's become a bit of a gimmicky player who goes for base-races at every possible opportunity, but he happens to do that very well. Nestea defeated Goswser, Heart, TheStC, and ViBE as he made his way to the Ro16, and he is a dangerous player to underestimate.
Similarly,
EG.Oz is also a player who has shown erratic form over the years. Some even speculated he was on the road to retirement before EG picked him up as Proleague support, and he took advantage of the new opportunity to come alive and take second place at IEM Shanghai and finish top eight in WCS America Season 2. He's cooled off somewhat in recent months, finishing Top32 at DreamHack Bucharest while grinding out some wins to reach the Ro16 of WCS America. There's no doubt that Oz is a championship caliber player in WCS America when he's hitting his stride and his creative builds are working for him, but at his worst he could be one of the weakest player in the the Korean contingent.
Amusingly enough, the one Chinese player in the group is the one who's had the most exposure. Even at the start of 2013, China was terribly secluded from the Western and Korean scenes, but the introduction of WCS America (not as good as WCS China, but it's definitely better than nothing) and a slew of online tournaments have helped us get to know their players better. That's how of all the players in this group,
iG.MacSed comes in with the most games played in recent months. He's shown us quite a variety of builds against Zergs, from aggressive two-base all-ins or his own take on sOs' void-ray triple nexuses, so it will be imperative that his opponents get their scouting done well. MacSed defeated Sage and Revival to make it to the Ro8 of last season's WCS America, so we know he can beat Koreans when it counts.
Overall outlook and predictionsWhat a difficult group to call! Not only could all four players potentially make it if they're playing well, but we're starting off with dual-mirror matches.
Scarlett > Nestea
Oz > MacSed
Scarlett > Oz
MacSed > Nestea
Oz > MacSed
Scarlett and Oz advance.