Cast starts: Sunday, Mar 27 6:00pm GMT (GMT+00:00)
Introduction
Several weeks have passed since our last preview. Since then, we have witnessed many major upsets in the TeamLiquid Legacy Starleague. Most notably, the lack of zergs in the round of 4. These results are quite unexpected considering the strength of foreigner zergs based on their performance in TLC and other BW tournaments in the past.
However, these results are up for interpretation and only time will tell if they are indicative of something grand or if it was by sheer luck that things ended up the way they did. For now, read on for round of 8 recaps by Bigfan and semifinal previews by Bisudagger.
Make sure to tune in on Sunday, March 27 at 2:00pm CEST (GMT-04:00) as both Sayle & LRM)Cats_Paw will entertain us with their knowledgeable and fun cast!
Ro8 Recap
In the first game on Neo Jade, DragOn established air dominance with his corsairs early on. Afterwards, he went for a 6 gate attack off two base and managed to catch julia completely off guard, breaking through his paltry defenses to take the first game. Their second game on Aztec was not much different. DragOn had his third denied but managed to hit an impeccable timing with his attack at julia's third, right before lurkers finished morphing. Though he had no observers, he had enough of his army alive afterwards to take the game and series (gif).
Power Overwhelming!
kogeT vs Flisk
On Neo Jade, both players opened with rax FE and added several factories later on. Flisk decided to camp outside Koget's ramp as he tried to establish a third but kept getting denied through mini-vulture attacks. In the meantime, Koget planted two starports, massed some wraiths and destroyed Flisk's economy while defending a major attack outside his natural. With a superior economy, Koget gained a large advantage that Flisk was unable to overcome and had to tap out. In the second game on Aztec, both players got off to an even start. Koget won the first big vulture clash and through wraiths, gained air control (gif). He eventually started targeting Flisk's economy through constant drops at his various bases and the ledge at Flisk's natural while expanding himself. With a superior economy and army, he took the series.
Vulture Wars!
Despite opening up with the same build on Neo Jade, Lancerx managed to plant a manner pylon and killed the scouting probe to gain a small advantage. Using the lack of information, he went for dark templars and expanded behind it. He managed to hit before Dewalt even had his first obs out to take a quick game. The second game on Aztec saw a reversal of roles. Dewalt decided to go for dark templars while Lancerx opted for a robo for observers. He attacked Dewalt and with some good micro, made it into Dewalt's base where he sniped a lot of probes while his own main was protected with two goons and an observer. Once the observer joined his army, Dewalt gg'd out.
Probe killssssss
On Neo Jade, Dsaqwe went for a forge FE while Trutacz grabbed a third in response. After planting several gateways, Dsaqwe went for a +1 speedlot attack on trutaCz's third (gif). Though trutaCz eventually cleaned up, his third was left in shambles. As he tried to recover, Dsaqwe researched storm and ended up attacking trutaCz's expansion while also taking control of the ramp. Eventually, his army was cleaned up but only after trutaCz lost his natural, his own army and the game soon after.
+1 Speedlot Attack
Unlike in the first game, trutaCz managed to get his third and fourth base established. However, he lost air control due to a control blunder (gif). Dsaqwe would go on to lose his own corsairs later on through some great mutalisk and scourge interception (gif). Both players took more bases with Dsaqwe continuing his aggression as much as possible in order to try and deny trutaCz from expanding further. He kept on gaining small advantages until he was in control of the game and eventually triumphed over trutaCz.
Blunders and Interceptions
Semifinals Preview
dsaqwe vs LancerX offers much more than a face value of PvP. Dsaqwe is a Croatian protoss player who hails from the sas clan training grounds. Yes, the sas clan that is home to popular veteran players skzlime, zaraki, Ace, and of course the great Sziky. Without a doubt, this strong clan has bred many champions over the years and time has finally brought another strong teammate to the forefront. Sas, no matter how strong, does not stand alone. An equally strong clan has been able to keep match in terms of strength and numbers, iFU (writers note: nsfw to say outloud). Among iFU’s notable players are eOnzErG, Marwin, Cryoc, Scan, and dsaqwe’s semifinal opponent LancerX. So without a doubt, there is heavy clan blood on the line here.
Predicting the outcome of this matchup is as hard as it gets. Dsaqwe managed to trip up tournament favorite, trutaCz, with a dominating 2-0 result. Meanwhile his only close series was at the mercy of a PvP versus vanatir. Dsaqwe is not without weakness in this matchup and should the matches make it to Overwatch, LancerX might have a map advantage. LancerX also comes off a strong 2-0 performance outplaying Dewaltoss in his PvP matchup. LancerX showed his skill and comfortably on both maps, Neo Aztec and Neo Jade, which will be played in 2 of the first 3 maps.
Ultimately, a glance at history is always the best indicator. LancerX is 7 of 8 when playing in a finals PvP of a tournament. At an 87% win rate, it is hard to imagine dsaqwe beating lancerX. Electric Circuit is the opening map and more favorable to dsaqwe’s playstyle. However, the next 3 maps work against him.
Prediction:
dsaqwe < Neo Electric Circuit > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Aztec > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Jade > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Overwatch > LancerX
dsaqwe <Fighting Spirit > LancerX
dsaqwe 1:3 LancerX
kogeT and DragOn are two odd ducks sharing the same pond. Both players just can’t make up their mind. They are both race pickers. Koget used to play Zerg on a regular basis except he would play TvZ to avoid the ZvZ matchup. Clearly the addiction to tanks has become real as Koget has chosen to play full Terran through the duration of the TLS championship. On the other side of the coin, we have DragOn. A protoss player that doesn’t PvP. He DOESN’T PvP! Which means regardless of this semifinals result, the finals will not have a PvP. Should DragOn move on, he will pick the mighty Zerg for the tournament finals.
Both semifinal matches will have the same map order and this should be quite a fun series to observe considering the TvP matchup between these two. The first two maps heavily favor DragOn. Starting in Electric Circuit, the map design allows for a safe third (mineral only) base to be taken by protoss and a third gas expansion is easily obtainable too. Unlike most modern maps, there are no multiple entrances to the gas third and its close proximity to the main makes it that much easier to defend for a protoss. Koget will have a lot of trouble halting DragOn’s macro here.
Following up a strong first map, DragOn can have a field day with Neo Aztec. This is a map that makes taking a third gas incredibly hard. Siege tanks can’t take safe harbor on the high ground should Terran take the close third gas. If Koget takes the farther/more cutoff third gas, his mech defenses are forced to be spread out. Aggressive protoss gateway play will pay off quite well here!
Neo Jade comes in as a great comeback map for Koget. Even the great Bisu fears a matchup on Jade against a great Terran player. Koget can make easy use of the terrain to harass DragOn and force his protoss army into bad situations.
Overwatch becomes the map to watch. Its balance is yet to be determined, but, at a glance, it looks very Terran favorable. A bridge at the natural allows for marine/timing contains in the early game. Snake like ridges between the spawn points are laid out perfectly for siege line map control. Although very important to note, Terran can not lay supply depots and turrets to help create defensive sim cities between their natural and third. Still, the map does well to help mech and Koget should take this map sending it to the ace on Fighting Spirit.
The fighting spirit meta is shifting quickly in the Korean scene. It’s a Terran dominant map and that success is going to find its way across seas. Koget has the golden opportunity and will take the final map.
Prediction:
kogeT < Neo Electric Circuit > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Aztec > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Jade > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Overwatch > DragOn
kogeT < Fighting Spirit > DragOn
kogeT 3:2 DragOn
Streams
Resources
Credits
Writers: BigFan and BisuDagger
Editors: BigFan
Graphics: v1
In the first game on Neo Jade, DragOn established air dominance with his corsairs early on. Afterwards, he went for a 6 gate attack off two base and managed to catch julia completely off guard, breaking through his paltry defenses to take the first game. Their second game on Aztec was not much different. DragOn had his third denied but managed to hit an impeccable timing with his attack at julia's third, right before lurkers finished morphing. Though he had no observers, he had enough of his army alive afterwards to take the game and series (gif).
Power Overwhelming!
kogeT vs Flisk
On Neo Jade, both players opened with rax FE and added several factories later on. Flisk decided to camp outside Koget's ramp as he tried to establish a third but kept getting denied through mini-vulture attacks. In the meantime, Koget planted two starports, massed some wraiths and destroyed Flisk's economy while defending a major attack outside his natural. With a superior economy, Koget gained a large advantage that Flisk was unable to overcome and had to tap out. In the second game on Aztec, both players got off to an even start. Koget won the first big vulture clash and through wraiths, gained air control (gif). He eventually started targeting Flisk's economy through constant drops at his various bases and the ledge at Flisk's natural while expanding himself. With a superior economy and army, he took the series.
Vulture Wars!
Despite opening up with the same build on Neo Jade, Lancerx managed to plant a manner pylon and killed the scouting probe to gain a small advantage. Using the lack of information, he went for dark templars and expanded behind it. He managed to hit before Dewalt even had his first obs out to take a quick game. The second game on Aztec saw a reversal of roles. Dewalt decided to go for dark templars while Lancerx opted for a robo for observers. He attacked Dewalt and with some good micro, made it into Dewalt's base where he sniped a lot of probes while his own main was protected with two goons and an observer. Once the observer joined his army, Dewalt gg'd out.
Probe killssssss
On Neo Jade, Dsaqwe went for a forge FE while Trutacz grabbed a third in response. After planting several gateways, Dsaqwe went for a +1 speedlot attack on trutaCz's third (gif). Though trutaCz eventually cleaned up, his third was left in shambles. As he tried to recover, Dsaqwe researched storm and ended up attacking trutaCz's expansion while also taking control of the ramp. Eventually, his army was cleaned up but only after trutaCz lost his natural, his own army and the game soon after.
+1 Speedlot Attack
Unlike in the first game, trutaCz managed to get his third and fourth base established. However, he lost air control due to a control blunder (gif). Dsaqwe would go on to lose his own corsairs later on through some great mutalisk and scourge interception (gif). Both players took more bases with Dsaqwe continuing his aggression as much as possible in order to try and deny trutaCz from expanding further. He kept on gaining small advantages until he was in control of the game and eventually triumphed over trutaCz.
Blunders and Interceptions
Semifinals Preview
dsaqwe vs LancerX offers much more than a face value of PvP. Dsaqwe is a Croatian protoss player who hails from the sas clan training grounds. Yes, the sas clan that is home to popular veteran players skzlime, zaraki, Ace, and of course the great Sziky. Without a doubt, this strong clan has bred many champions over the years and time has finally brought another strong teammate to the forefront. Sas, no matter how strong, does not stand alone. An equally strong clan has been able to keep match in terms of strength and numbers, iFU (writers note: nsfw to say outloud). Among iFU’s notable players are eOnzErG, Marwin, Cryoc, Scan, and dsaqwe’s semifinal opponent LancerX. So without a doubt, there is heavy clan blood on the line here.
Predicting the outcome of this matchup is as hard as it gets. Dsaqwe managed to trip up tournament favorite, trutaCz, with a dominating 2-0 result. Meanwhile his only close series was at the mercy of a PvP versus vanatir. Dsaqwe is not without weakness in this matchup and should the matches make it to Overwatch, LancerX might have a map advantage. LancerX also comes off a strong 2-0 performance outplaying Dewaltoss in his PvP matchup. LancerX showed his skill and comfortably on both maps, Neo Aztec and Neo Jade, which will be played in 2 of the first 3 maps.
Ultimately, a glance at history is always the best indicator. LancerX is 7 of 8 when playing in a finals PvP of a tournament. At an 87% win rate, it is hard to imagine dsaqwe beating lancerX. Electric Circuit is the opening map and more favorable to dsaqwe’s playstyle. However, the next 3 maps work against him.
Prediction:
dsaqwe < Neo Electric Circuit > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Aztec > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Jade > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Overwatch > LancerX
dsaqwe <Fighting Spirit > LancerX
dsaqwe 1:3 LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Electric Circuit > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Aztec > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Jade > LancerX
dsaqwe < Neo Overwatch > LancerX
dsaqwe 1:3 LancerX
kogeT and DragOn are two odd ducks sharing the same pond. Both players just can’t make up their mind. They are both race pickers. Koget used to play Zerg on a regular basis except he would play TvZ to avoid the ZvZ matchup. Clearly the addiction to tanks has become real as Koget has chosen to play full Terran through the duration of the TLS championship. On the other side of the coin, we have DragOn. A protoss player that doesn’t PvP. He DOESN’T PvP! Which means regardless of this semifinals result, the finals will not have a PvP. Should DragOn move on, he will pick the mighty Zerg for the tournament finals.
Both semifinal matches will have the same map order and this should be quite a fun series to observe considering the TvP matchup between these two. The first two maps heavily favor DragOn. Starting in Electric Circuit, the map design allows for a safe third (mineral only) base to be taken by protoss and a third gas expansion is easily obtainable too. Unlike most modern maps, there are no multiple entrances to the gas third and its close proximity to the main makes it that much easier to defend for a protoss. Koget will have a lot of trouble halting DragOn’s macro here.
Following up a strong first map, DragOn can have a field day with Neo Aztec. This is a map that makes taking a third gas incredibly hard. Siege tanks can’t take safe harbor on the high ground should Terran take the close third gas. If Koget takes the farther/more cutoff third gas, his mech defenses are forced to be spread out. Aggressive protoss gateway play will pay off quite well here!
Neo Jade comes in as a great comeback map for Koget. Even the great Bisu fears a matchup on Jade against a great Terran player. Koget can make easy use of the terrain to harass DragOn and force his protoss army into bad situations.
Overwatch becomes the map to watch. Its balance is yet to be determined, but, at a glance, it looks very Terran favorable. A bridge at the natural allows for marine/timing contains in the early game. Snake like ridges between the spawn points are laid out perfectly for siege line map control. Although very important to note, Terran can not lay supply depots and turrets to help create defensive sim cities between their natural and third. Still, the map does well to help mech and Koget should take this map sending it to the ace on Fighting Spirit.
The fighting spirit meta is shifting quickly in the Korean scene. It’s a Terran dominant map and that success is going to find its way across seas. Koget has the golden opportunity and will take the final map.
Prediction:
kogeT < Neo Electric Circuit > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Aztec > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Jade > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Overwatch > DragOn
kogeT < Fighting Spirit > DragOn
kogeT 3:2 DragOn
kogeT < Neo Electric Circuit > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Aztec > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Jade > DragOn
kogeT < Neo Overwatch > DragOn
kogeT < Fighting Spirit > DragOn
kogeT 3:2 DragOn