after an epic upper half of the Ro8 bracket, we close the other half this week.
Featuring the recap of the impeccable series between BeSt and Action by Simplistik, Bisudagger covering Jaedong's first Ro8 appearance in the ASL in a long time going up against hero and BLinD-RawR previewing JyJ's daunting task of going up against the odds on favorite of those who remain Soulkey.
Featuring the recap of the impeccable series between BeSt and Action by Simplistik, Bisudagger covering Jaedong's first Ro8 appearance in the ASL in a long time going up against hero and BLinD-RawR previewing JyJ's daunting task of going up against the odds on favorite of those who remain Soulkey.
Game 1 - Sylphid
The bulk of today's report will focus on that game, but let us briefly review the context. Action won game 1 quickly with a Ling flood off an in-base third Hatch. No Drones ever mined the Zerg natural. And before Best's second Cannon finishes warping, Action pounces!
Go Time!
Lings quckily tear down the Gate. Best doesn't manage to plug the gap with anothern building and the Probes, slightly out of position, fail to shield the Cannons. With more Lings flooding across the map, the rest is a formality.
Game 2 - Heartbreak Ridge
It's almost criminal that this game nearly turned into a side show. What an embarrassment of riches!
Action quickly goes up to three gas and proceeds to apply some early pressure. Hydras manage to pick off the Gate and Forge before the Protoss weapon upgrade finishes. Behind the pressure, Action adds two Hatcheries and completes his Lair.
Best opts for a fast Citadel and extra Gates. Speedlots and a Dark Templar roam the map, but find no opening. With Mutas on the way, and no Corsairs, we spot a Dark Archon merging at the Protoss natural. This works as a threat to keep the flappy flyers away. Action tries to draw out the Maelstrom with a single Muta, but Best sets a precedent for the series and refuses to swallow the bait.
Best tries to move out while taking a 3rd, but the Observer gets sniped. To make matters wrose, an unscouted Hydra flank demolishes the warping Nexus, before it can get cancelled. Over the next few minutes, it looks like Best is completely unravelling. A Hydra drop into the main does a fair bit of damage. At the same time at least 37(!) Probes get impaled by Lurkers from the ridge above the natural.
Heartbreak Ridge alright
Best manages to take out the Zerg mineral only, but then his push stalls. Action still has a solid economy, while Protoss is running on fumes. The game looks all but decided. Everyone senses that the swarm simple needs to regroup and go for the kill. Action is only too happy to oblige.
What happens next is better watched than described. Action keeps throwing multi-angle attacks at Best, over and over. Dropping the main while attacking the third. Faking a drop and going for the natural. Then a big drop into the main, followed by another big attack on the third. But every time Best's units are split just well enough. And his spell usage is literally incredible. We haven't seen money storms like that since Jangbi's back to back OSL wins.
"Hold it right there!"
Stuck on Lair, no 4th, main mined out and unable to deny the Protoss expansion, Action concedes.
One Templar was credited with 28 kills, which a representative of the DA union described as "greedy individualism."
Bonus points are awarded to attentive viewers for correctly guessing the number of Maelstroms cast this game. + Show Spoiler +
Too many, I can't count that far.
We can only speculate about the psychology of the players. But, to me, Action seemed calm and perhaps somewhat bemused afterwards. Best, on the other hand, appeared to wonder if he was having a fever dream.
Did that just happen?
Game 3 - Nemesis
Nemesis, noun, from νέμειν _némein_, "to give what is due";
a source of harm or ruin;
retributive justice;
an opponent that cannot be beaten or overcome.
Thus we find ourselves on Nemesis, a completely normal map, for a completely normal occasion. Action is vibrating in his chair. Protoss fans want to elevate Best to Godhood.
Our own personal Jesus
The openings are pretty normal. Forge, Nexus, Cannon in the top left vs Overpool in the top right. The audience is hyped. When the scouting Probe delays the natural Hatchery slightly, we hear loud cheers. Action tries an aggressive Ling move, but Best deflects it reasonably well.
Ling Gambit
Action expands to the bottom right natural and makes some more Lings. Like every self-respecting Zerg (and Mini), he knows that the correct follow-up to failed aggression is... more aggression! Best, like every laddering Protoss, knows that a Hydra attack is coming, so he warps in four Cannons, blind. Action tries to be sneaky, by going through the neutral eggs with his Hydras, but gets scouted just barely. So the Hydras slither over to the Protoss natural. Two Cannons and the Forge go down, but +1 Weapons finishes in time.
"Upgrade complete"
Meanwhile, Best's first Sair confirms that the Zerg economy is very low: only two Drones at the third and still on three Hatcheries. Action tries to go through the neutral eggs at the top again, but is scouted again. Best adds more Cannons to his main, while flooding Gateways. And, again, Action pulls all his units together for a frontal attack. Do you think there might be a pattern? The 0-0 Hydras are met by 6 Cannons and 3 Templars, with plenty of Zealots in the back, and decide to ease off.
Unlike in game 2, this time Action realises that the time for aggro has passed. Best has +1, speed, storm and seven Gates. Zerg is still on Lair with four Hatches. Zealots try to sneak onto the map, but they don't have critical mass and get pushed back home by Hydras. A DT tries to go give Action some of his own medicine, by sneaking through the neutral eggs, but is thwarted by an Overlord. After that, Action shuts the door, by destroying the assimilators on Best's side of the middle base.
There is a bit of a lull in the game, while Best warps in two rounds of Goons and Action spawns some Mutas. For some reason, the Hydras have all pulled back into a defensive position. Perhaps Action is expecting some drop harrass or a Sair attack. The Zerg fliers find no damage, because there are Cannons everywhere. So, quite reasonably, Best expands to left-middle, and also closes the passage to the bottom-left main.
When the action resumes, the roles have become reversed. Best has a massive army and, come what may, he will use it. Action has turtled up with Sunkens and Lurkers.
Massive Attack
The Goons start chewing through the Sunkens. Action snipes both Observers, but Best has Storms for days. For a moment it looks like the wall is crumbling, but Goons are
Best clears out the first row of Sunkens, a Hatchery and pops the Evo chamber. But the fight is so long (over two minutes) that Action has time to build a fresh row of Sunkens behind. When it finally looks like the Protoss army might be moving in for the kill, a bunch of Goons wander off again. And with a big flank, Action cleans up.
We gotta get outa this place
Phew, that was tense. Let's take a moment to see where we stand. We are now nearly 17 minutes into the game. The Hydras are finally on +1. The Lings still don't have speed. Zerg controls the the right side. Drones just started mining the bottom right main and Action is in the process of taking the right middle base. The Zerg army is mainly Hydra/Lurker. Nydas Canals are being connected up. Three Evo Chambers, a Queen's Nest and a Defiler Mound form an aesthetically pleasing crescent around the main Hive. Another Hatchery is growing.
Strap in, we're going long.
Best is on 1-0-2 upgrades. His army is mainly Zealot/Templar. Protoss controls the left side. Probes just started mining the bottom left natural. There are no minerals left in the starting main. The first Shuttle is ready to head out, to deliver some weather.
Probes practicing a rain dance
The critical conflict for the rest of the game will be over the control of the middle bases. Top middle should favour Action, because he has ground access from the right and the door on the left is locked forever. It seems likely that the left and right middle bases will stay with their current owners. The bottom middle hasn't been touched yet.
The next passage of the game is fairly calm, as both players are gearin up for late game. A couple of Zealots drop into the still sealed right middle base, but they get taken out a little later. Probes get stuck in a doom loop while transferring, but Best notices before anything bad happens (remember game 2). Goons open up access to the bottom middle base, then destroy the Assimilators on the right side and close the access from the middle as well. Action starts a Hatch at top middle, Best a Nexus at bottom left. Both players continue to add production and tech. There are at least ten Hatcheries. A Reaver Support Bay has also been warped in.
Best tries his hand at some DT harrass, with limited success. The Protoss army keeps patrolling the map, but there are no easy targets. Supplies are almost even, at around 150, so Zerg must have a scary army stashed away somewhere. We notice Ling and Overlord speed are done, as Action scouts the bottom middle. Zerg ground upgrades are now at 2-1, while Protoss just hit 3-1-2. Best prods the original Zerg natural and gets to enjoy the first Plague of the game. More Shuttles come into play, but Action seems to have units everywhere.
Mission improbable
At full supply, with nearly 3K minerals and 1k gas, Action pulls the trigger. He drops a swarm/[insert appropriate collective noun for lurkers]/pestilence of Ling/Lurker/Defiler into the Protoss main, while also attacking the bottom middle base. Best holds the main with great Storms, but loses control of bottom middle.
Denied, for now.
Another drop attempt into the main is chased off by Storms. Some jostling in the middle of map allows Best to bleed off some now obsolete plagued Zealots. He knows that late game Zerg is difficult to deal with. His solution is to turtle up with lots and lots and lots of splash damage.
Around this time, 27 minutes in, Best loses map control for the remainder of the game. Out in the open, 50 supply down, Protoss is outmatched. Worryingly for Best, he has a lot less resources banked than Action, and is chronically low on gas. Even more worryingly, Action controls both top and bottom middle. Zerg is starting to put pressure on the Protoss natural, but there are a lot of defences. And Best is adding more. A big cluster of loaded overlords sharks around the bottom left, but a drop there would be suicide.
This may look like paranoia, but I assure you it isn't.
With Best's army drawn South by the threatened drop, Zerg launches a full-scale attack against the original Protoss natural. Reinforcements cannot get through a big Lurker field without detection and the natural gets abandoned. Production and tech buildings are expensive though, so Best does his, well, best to hold on to his main. There are a lot of Cannons and the Storms are good, but Action has too much. The base gets overrun, like Fenix at Antioch. Remember Fenix?!
Fenix at Antioch
Action starts cleaning up top left and Best looks down for the count. But the swarm, perhaps feeling too sure of victory, carelessly left the door to the treasury unlocked. In a brilliant move, the remaining Protoss army slips into the bottom middle base, like thieves under cover of darkness. There is almost no resistance and Best starts to add fortifications immediately.
Action doesn't seem too concerned. His economy is still healthy, so he prepares a Guardian switch. This makes perfect sense. Reavers can't shoot air, Archons and Cannons can be outranged, and Templars... Well, Templars don't even have an attack. Surely they will run out of energy.
Weirdly, Action decides to morph his first clutch of Guardians above the ridge of the bottom left base, in view of an Observer. When Templars start hovering over he cancels the transformation. The devolved Mutas petulantly take a few ineffectual potshots at the hovering lightning rods and then flap off.
Playing with fire
Having come to his senses just in time, Action takes back the initiative. Overlords silently float over the water between the bases, to drop a commando of Lurkers, Lings and Hydras directly onto the ridge. They have one task: Blow up the Assimilators to cut off reinforcements. This scene is basically straight out of every action movie.
Behind enemy lines
The manoeuvre successfully turns bottom middle into an island. Incidentally, this attack also drew out a lot of storms. And now the real assault begins. Ten Guardians float over and start the siege.
A different kind of weather: acid rain
Zerg has no air upgrades, but it doesn't seem to matter. The Cannons implode. A few storms kill a couple of Guardians, but the noose tightens inexorably. The Archons manage another couple of kills, but the terrain is unfavourable to bulky ground units with short range attacks. Action feels himself on the home stretch. He starts pulling his ground units in from all over the map and drops... six Lings and one Hydra?! Best shuttles in two fully charged Templars and holds.
However, Action isn't finished yet. We get treated to a rare spectacle, as the next wave of drops brings 5-3 Ultras. When was the last time we've watched a titanic battle of fully upgraded Ultras vs fully upgraded Archons? (If anyone has the vod of free vs Jaedong on Athena from ClubDay MSL, please link it below!) A Shuttle gets Scourged, the defending units die, the Cannons implode and, finally, the Nexus falls.
Ultrasmash
Best is clearly in serious trouble now. He's 60 supply down, with less resources banked, and is slowly running out of minerals at his last mining bases. He must take back bottom middle, or concede. His immediate challenge is that bottom middle is an island and he has only a single (1, one, uno) Shuttle. Zerg, of course, has access to a whole transport armada. The one thing going for Best is his ridiculous stack of high-tech units.
Silicon Valley
Shuttling in Reavers, Templars and a few Zealots (who must have been off shift during the first half of the game), Best gains a foothold on the Western ridge. Turns out that Reavers are pretty decent against Ultras. Watching carefully, we also notice that Action has made a small mistake in the frantic rush to send reinforcements. And I think this is what might have ultimately cost him the game.
The reinforcing Hydras are
Time waits for no man.
After this twist, we notice that Action is nearly mined out, while Best still has some minerals. Overall Protoss must have been significantly more efficient. Without access to bottom middle, the Swarm will not be able to take down the remaining Protoss fortifications. In hindsight, I wonder if Zerg could've pulled back here and tried to eke out a draw, by fortifying one or more of the other islands. But this Zerg is called Action and the idea of a draw never even crosses his mind. He gets a fresh round of Guardians and sets up for another drop, this time with Defiler support. Best is ready. Cannons warp in, Reavers polish scarabs, Archons loom and eleven Templars positively crackle with energy. Action hurls his brood against the Protoss wall. Dark Swarm, Plague, Lurkers, Hydras, Guardians, Cracklings!
"Day breaks in your head." - Norah Jones commenting on supreme late-game PvZ.
The swarm evaporates in a high energy tempest the shade of a clear blue sky.
Action assembles one last ditch drop, but it is pitifully small. Many Overlords are mercilessly electrocuted. Supply blocked at 118/107, there are not enough resources for another attempt.
Not enough
G G
Game 4 - Vermeer
How does Action feel after the previous game? Aggressive. He brings enough Hydra pressure to take down the Gate, Forge and force eight(!) Cannons, without losing much. And unlike last game, the Zerg economy is solid.
The wall bends, but doesn't break.
Best scouts with his Sair and spins his Forges. Anticipating a Muta-switch, a Dark Archon is summoned into service. But the Mutas never come. Instead, Action further ramps up his economy, by taking a 4th and adding macro Hatches. He also starts two Evo Chambers and techs to Hive, all while growing a large Hydra/Lurker force. Best responds by expanding and keeping his army together at home.
The upshot is that Action is 10 supply ahead before the first serious engagement. A large Lurker field denies Protoss any chance of a frontal attack. Simultaneously, a huge gob of Hydras swings round for a backstab, but is miraculously spotted by a single Zealot out for a stroll. Best's Observers get Scourged and he rushes back to try to save his 3rd base. It looks like the Hydras are going to do the job, as the Goons trip over their own legs as usual, but, remember game 2?
DOUBLE STROM!!
The Hydras get mowed down, but all is not lost for Action. Supplies are still even, his economy is unharmed and Hive is on the way. Lurkers move into the open space between the Protoss natural and 3rd. How many times have we seen a Lurker field like this turn into a Protoss graveyard? With reinforcements seemingly cut off, another big wave of Hydras hits Best's fresh expansion.
High tide
Three great Storms allow a small Goon squad to cling on. Before fresh Zerg units can join the fight, Best moves out with a band of Zealots and cleans up the Lurkers surprisingly easily. +2 armor may have played a role.
Action, Hive now finished, decides to stick with aggression. He spawns another two rounds of Hydras and attacks. But, with a little Storm support, Best's Goons stand strong. Out of units, without defences at home, Action throws in the towel. The crowd goes wild!
Memories being made
Deep breath.
...
WOW!
What have we just witnessed?!
What an absolutely amazing series.
Thank you ASL.
Thank you Action!
And thank you Best.
May this be your stepping stone to greater heights.
Whatever happens next, this series will live on in the collective Protoss memory.
All Killer No Filler
Jaedong vs by.hero is a disappointing match. Not because it is Zerg versus Zerg, but because there is no clear enemy. Jaedong may hold the eternal fan favorite title in every matchup, but it’s hard to cheer against hero. He is a player who battled from rank 104th in the Kespa era to being a clear top 5 player. The respect earned, micro shown, and skill displayed from by.hero since the Sonic era has impressed everyone. With 6 players remaining in the tournament, by.hero must be the statistical favorite to win it all.
While Zerg versus Zerg has build order wins and set strategies, the maps play a crucial role in who will win. Stylistic strengths will be more obvious because of the huge map diversity.
Map 1: Sylphid is a gambling matchup. Its three position design makes Zergs more vulnerable to ling all-in or fast speed builds. This is compounded by the lack of a ramp to protect the main. This season we witnessed an incredible defense by Jaedong on this map. This recent memory may trigger Jaedong to get tech speed fast in anticipation of this possible move by by.hero. by.hero tends to play more conservatively and tech mutas. This will backfire and Jaedong will take game 1.
Map 2: Dark Origin, a two spawn map with ramps ,is a whole different ball game. It’s way harder to bust, but you know exactly where your opponent is. Taking a natural is difficult on this map too. No doubt by.hero will tech to mutas quickly again too. If both players have gentlemen builds and naturals are taken, by.hero has to have the bigger advantage. His muta play is at the highest level in Terran versus Zerg. This will translate over and get him his first win of the night.
Map 3: Heartbreak Ridge plays out differently from Origin. The run distance with slow lings is quite far. It almost guarantees one player will go for an early expansion. Knowing that your opponent will mostly likely expand early sets up the mental game. One player will convince himself to tech speed first. Regardless of who techs speed, Jaedong has shown micro at level the brings back memories that pre-date is wrist injuries. His skill will outshine by.hero in his second win.
Map 4: Vermeer is the most standard map of the series. The map has been in circulation for 3 seasons. This is to hero’s great advantage. In and out of the ASL, he is extremely familiar with the map. Last season he won on the map against Soulkey during their 3rd place match. In fact, he went undefeated against 3 separate players in ASL14 on Vermeer. The home field advantage here will definitely put a second win in hero’s lap.
Map 5: Series tied, and Nemesis is the final map. Anything but cross-spawn is good for Jeadong. The assumption here is that Jaedong has the prevailing ground game and won’t give his base up in the early game. Looking at hero’s trends, he has been dipping in and out of the top four. On top of that, the theme of this tournament is veteran players returning to form. Anything other predicting Jaedong advancing would get me drawn and quartered. Jaedong takes game 5.
Jaedong Advances To The Semifinals 3-2!
Even Flow
JyJ has fought a lot of doubters in making it to the Ro8 thus far, Soulkey on the other hand has already dashed the hopes of two favourites in Light and Snow, will JyJ follow suit or is he going to rise to the occasion.
Vermeer (JyJ's pick):
Despite what the current season stats say this is the most solid pick out of JyJ, online he's done pretty well on the map, a very standard map that's already been around for 3 seasons and both players should know inside and out.
Heartbreak Ridge(Soulkey's Pick):
There's something to be said about the map pool that HBR would be considered the lesser of the evils for Terran as it stands its easily one of the worst maps for them. Maybe JyJ has something cooked up, if not Soulkey should easily smash this set.
Sylphid (JyJ’s Pick):
Sylphid has been around for so long its the true standard map of our times, as far as this season of ASL goes, Terran hasn’t been doing too hot on it, with the only terran win on sylphid against zerg being JyJ over ZerO so clearly JyJ knows how to win on the map on stage at least.
Dark Origin(Soulkey’s Pick):
Zerg is 6-1 against Terran on this map in this season alone, their online win rate isn’t good either, probably the easiest pick Soulkey made looking at the pool of maps, just a little surprised that its his second pick not the first.
Now I could talk about the final map on Retro which is decent for terran over zerg but not by that much. More like its increasingly unlikely we’re going that far this series, its very likely that Soulkey who has not only come out of one of the hardest groups in ASL history and the fact that he’s the best performing zerg in the Major Proleauge, he is going to win 3-0 or 3-1 dropping the game on sylphid at best.
JyJ on the other hand has had middling results sticking to only major proleague over the last couple of months, which is an improvement, but not nearly at the tier that Soulkey is in.
Soulkey to Advance to the Semifinals 3-1!
Writers: BLinD-RawR, BisuDagger, Simplistik
Graphics: v1
Editors: BLinD-RawR
Graphics: v1
Editors: BLinD-RawR