ELEAGUE_Major_2017

ELEAGUE Major 2017

ELEAGUE Major 2017

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ELEAGUE Major: Atlanta 2017, also known as ELEAGUE Major 2017 or Atlanta 2017, was the tenth Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Major Championship. It was organized by ELEAGUE and held in Atlanta, Georgia, United States from January 22 to 29, 2017. It featured sixteen professional teams from around the world. Eight teams directly qualified based on their top eight placement in the last major, ESL One Cologne 2016, while another eight teams qualified through the ELEAGUE Offline Major Qualifier. ELEAGUE Major was the third consecutive Major with a prize pool of $1,000,000.[1]

Quick Facts Tournament information, Sport ...

The playoff stage consisted of eight teams. Astralis, Fnatic, Gambit Gaming, Natus Vincere, SK Gaming, and Virtus.pro were returning Legends. FaZe Clan and North were new Legends, replacing FlipSid3 Tactics and Team Liquid, who failed to make it past the group stage. The grand finals pitted Astralis, in its first ever final after nine playoff appearances, and Virtus.pro, which was in its second finals and looking for its second major title. Astralis had defeated Natus Vincere and Fnatic in the playoff stage, while Virtus.pro had beaten North and defending champions SK Gaming. In the third map of the best-of-three final, Astralis edged out Virtus.pro in the final round of regulation for its first major title.

Background

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) is a multiplayer first-person shooter video game developed by Hidden Path Entertainment and Valve. It is the fourth game in the Counter-Strike series. In professional CS:GO, the Valve-sponsored Majors are the most prestigious tournaments.[2][3]

Entering the 2017 ELEAGUE Major, the two-time defending champion was SK Gaming, which won both MLG Columbus 2016 (as Luminosity Gaming) and ESL One Cologne 2016. SK was also the first non-European team to win a Major. At the time, Fnatic was the most decorated team, with three Majors, and SK Gaming was in second, with two.

Format

The top eight teams from the ESL One Cologne 2016 ("Legends") were automatically invited to ESL One Cologne 2016. The remaining eight spots were filled by teams that advanced from the ELEAGUE Major Main Qualifier. The ELEAGUE Main Qualifier was a 16-team tournament consisting of the bottom eight teams from Cologne 2016, as well as eight teams promoted from four regional qualifiers. The top eight teams at the Main Qualifier then advanced to the Major as the "Challengers".

Unlike previous Majors, which used the GSL-format for group stages, this Major was the first to use the Swiss-system for group stages.[4] The top eight teams at the end of the group stage advanced to the playoff stage. All playoff matches were best-of-three, single elimination.

Map pool

The seven-map pool did not change from Cologne 2016. Before each best-of-one match in the group stage, teams alternated banning maps until five maps had been banned. One of the two remaining maps was randomly selected, and the team that that did not get a third ban then selected which side it wanted to start on.[5] In all best-of-three series, each team first banned a map, leaving a five-map pool. Each team then chose a map, with the opposing team selecting which side they wanted to start on for their opponent's map choice. The two map picks were the first two maps in the best-of-three. The teams then each banned one more map, leaving one map remaining for the best-of-three decider if necessary.[5]

Maps
  • Cache
  • Cobblestone
  • Dust II
  • Mirage
  • Nuke
  • Overpass
  • Train

Broadcast talent

ELEAGUE retained much of the broadcast team that had been featured in ELEAGUE Season 1 and Season 2.[6]

Hosts

  • Sue "Smix" Lee
  • Chris Puckett

Analysts

  • Richard Lewis
  • Jason "moses" O'Toole
  • Duncan "Thorin" Shields

Commentators

  • James Bardolph
  • Anders Blume
  • Henry "HenryG" Greer
  • Daniel "ddk" Kapadia
  • Auguste "Semmler" Massonnat
  • Matthew "Sadokist" Trivett

Observers

  • Kevin "kVIN_S" Swift
  • David DJ "Prius" Kuntz
  • Benjamin "CoffeeMcSwagger" Budka

Others

  • Jason "Alchemist" Baker (Producer)
  • Steve Daily (Director)
  • Reece Fowler (Gameplay Director)

Broadcasts

All streams were broadcast on Twitch in various languages.

  • ELEAGUE TV
  • 99Damage
  • BiDa
  • HuomaoTV
  • Ogaming TV
  • SpilerTV
  • Starladder

Major Qualifier

Like the previous Majors, there was a single Main Qualifier after four Minors, or regional qualifiers. The bottom eight teams from ESL One Cologne 2016 received automatic bids to the Main Qualifier. Two teams each from the Asia, North America, Europe, and CIS Minors also competed in the Main Qualifier.

Regional Qualifiers

The final four teams from each qualifier are shown below: two from each moved on to the Main Qualifier.

Asia Minor

Teams
  • Renegades (Invited)
  • TyLoo (Invited)
  • VG.CyberZen (China)
  • MVP Project (East Asia)
  • BOT (India + Middle East)
  • Athletico (Oceanic)
  • Fire Dragoon E-Sport (SEA)
  • Tean nxl (SEA)
Upper round 1Upper finalFinal
A1TyLoo0
B2VG.CyberZen2
B2VG.CyberZen0
B1Renegades2
B1Renegades2
A2MVP Project0
B1Renegades0
A1TyLoo2
Lower round 1Lower final
B2VG.CyberZen1
A1TyLoo2A1TyLoo2
A2MVP Project0

Europe Minor

Teams
Upper round 1Upper finalFinal
A1Space Soldiers0
B2HellRaisers2
B2HellRaisers2
A2GODSENT0
B1Epsilon eSports1
A2GODSENT2
B2HellRaisers1
A2GODSENT2
Lower round 1Lower final
A2GODSENT2
A1Space Soldiers0B1Epsilon eSports1
B!Epsilon eSports2

CIS Minor

Teams
  • ALL-IN (High Seed)
  • RoX (High Seed)
  • Team Spirit (High Seed)
  • Tengri (High Seed)
  • EYESport (Low Seed)
  • Quantum Bellator Fire (Low Seed)
  • VwS Gaming (Low Seed)
  • zARLANS (Low Seed)
Upper round 1Upper finalFinal
B1Team Spirit2
A2VwS Gaming0
B1Team Spirit2
A1ALL-IN1
A1ALL-IN2
B2Q.B. Fire0
B1Team Spirit0
A1ALL-IN2
Lower round 1Lower final
A1ALL-IN1
A2VwS Gaming1A2VwS Gaming0
B2Q.B. Fire0

Americas Minor

Teams
Upper round 1Upper finalQualified
1Cloud91
4Muffin Lightning0
1Cloud90
2Immortals2
2Immortals1
3Team SoloMid0
2 Immortals
1 Cloud9
Lower round 1Lower final
1Cloud92
4Muffin Lightning03Team SoloMid0
3Team SoloMid2

Main Qualifier

The Main Qualifier was a sixteen-team Swiss-system tournament in which, after the first round, teams only played other teams with the same win–loss record. Each match was best-of-one, and no team played another team twice. All teams played until they had either won or lost three games: any team with three wins advanced to the Major, and any team with three losses was eliminated.

First round seeding was determined by the following:

  • Teams that placed 9th–12th at the previous Major (Team Dignitas, FaZe Clan, mousesports, Ninjas in Pyjamas) were first seeds
  • Teams that placed 13th–16th at the previous Major (Team EnVyUs, G2 Esports, OpTic Gaming, Counter Logic Gaming) were second seeds
  • Teams that placed first in their regional qualifiers (TyLoo, Vega Squadron, GODSENT, Immortals) were third seeds
  • Teams that were runners-up in their regional qualifiers (Renegades, Team Spirit, Hellraisers, Cloud9) were fourth seeds

GODSENT and FaZe Clan were the first teams to advance to the Major. The next three teams to move on were mousesports, OpTic Gaming, and Team Dignitas. In the fifth round of matches, the final teams to move on were Team EnVyUs, G2 Esports, and HellRaisers.[7]

Teams

Cologne 2016 Bottom 8
Regional Qualifiers
  1. The players of ALL-IN were signed by Vega Squadron after the CIS Minor.[8]
More information Place, Team ...
Main Qualifier Results

Teams competing

The top eight teams from ESL One Cologne 2016, the Legends, were joined by the eight teams to advance from the main qualifier, the Challengers.

Legends
Challengers

1 The five players and coach of Team Dignitas mutually part ways with the team shortly after the Major Qualifier. The roster is then signed by the Danish football (soccer) club F.C. Copenhagen and Nordisk Film was named North.[9]

Perhaps the biggest change was Team Dignitas and the Philadelphia 76ers and their players and coach mutually parting ways and the organizations announced plans to build a North American roster; in addition, it plans to invest into positions such as a sports psychologist and a nutritionist.[10][11][12] The coach, Casper "ruggah" Due, said, despite "competitive offers," the roster decided to leave the team.[13] Roughly a day later, the team is reported to sign with the Danish football (soccer) club F.C. Copenhagen and the Denmark-based Nordisk Film and officially signed on January 3, 2016. The team will be called North.[14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

GODSENT acquired Robin "flusha" Rönnquist, Jesper "JW" Wecksell, and Freddy "KRiMZ" Johansson from Fnatic, who acquired Jonas "Lekr0" Olofsson and Simon "twist" Eliasson, so GODSENT acquired the Legends spot from Fnatic.[22] However, KRiMZ rejoined Fnatic while Lekr0 rejoined GODSENT, giving the Legends spot back to Fnatic.[23]

Pre-major ranking

The HLTV.org January 16, 2017 ranking, the final one released before the ELEAGUE Major, is displayed below.[24]

More information World Ranking, Place ...
HLTV.org Pre-major Ranking

Change since January 9, 2017 ranking

Group stage

The group stage was a sixteen-team Swiss-system format in which, after the first round, teams only played other teams with the same win–loss record. Each match was best-of-one, and no team played another team twice. All teams played until they had either won or lost three games: any team with three wins advanced to the playoff stage, and any team with three losses was eliminated.

First round seeding was determined by the following:

  • Teams that placed top four at the previous Major (SK Gaming, Team Liquid, Fnatic, Virtus.pro) were first seeds
  • Teams that placed 5th–8th place at the previous Major (Astralis, FlipSid3 Tactics, Gambit Gaming, Natus Vincere) were second seeds
  • Teams that placed first in the main qualifier (GODSENT, FaZe Clan) and the top two teams that placed third based on their seeds going into the major qualifier (North, mousesports) were third seeds
  • The remaining teams (OpTic Gaming, Team EnVyUs, G2 Esports, HellRaisers) were fourth seeds

In the first round, first seeds played a randomly drawn fourth seed, and second seeds played a randomly drawn third seed. After this round, teams were randomly drawn against other teams with the same record (e.g., 1–0 teams against 1–0 teams, 0–1 teams against 0–1 teams). The eight teams to win three (out of a possible five) games were granted "Legend" status and an automatic invitation to the next Major.

This was the first Major in which GODSENT players Robin "flusha" Rönnquist and Jesper "JW" Wecksell did not advance to the playoffs, after losing to North in the fifth round and placing 9th. They had maintained Legend status with Fnatic prior to transferring to GODSENT.

More information Place, Team ...

Playoffs

Bracket

Natus Vincere and Virtus.pro were the top seeds after the group stage, and would face a random opponent from the pool of Astralis, FaZe Clan, and North (the teams who finished 3–2). Natus Vincere was paired with Astralis and Virtus.pro drew North. From the pool of Gambit Gaming, Fnatic, and SK Gaming (the teams who finished 3–1), Gambit and Fnatic were randomly drawn to face each other. The remaining two teams, SK Gaming and FaZe Clan, were then paired to finalize the bracket.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
Natus Vincere 1
Astralis 2
Astralis 2
Fnatic 0
Gambit Gaming 1
Fnatic 2
Astralis 2
Virtus.pro 1
Virtus.pro 2
North 1
Virtus.pro 2
SK Gaming 0
SK Gaming 2
FaZe Clan 1

Quarterfinals

Natus Vincere vs. Astralis

Casters: James Bardolph & ddk

The first game of the playoffs in the Fox Theatre pitted Natus Vincere and Astralis against each other.

More information Natus Vincere vs. Astralis Scores, Team ...

Gambit Gaming vs Fnatic

Casters: Anders Blume & Semmler

More information Gambit Gaming vs. Fnatic Scores, Team ...

Virtus.pro vs North

Casters: Sadokist & HenryG

Virtus.pro was the other team along with Na'Vi to go a perfect 3–0 in the group stage, defeating OpTic Gaming, G2 Esports, and Gambit Gaming.

More information Virtus.pro vs North Scores, Team ...

SK Gaming vs FaZe Clan

Casters: Anders Blume & Semmler

SK Gaming was considered the world's best team of 2016 after winning the two majors of the year, MLG Columbus 2016 and ESL One Cologne 2016, and could be the first team ever to win three major titles in a row.

More information SK Gaming vs. FaZe Clan Scores, Team ...

Semifinals

Astralis vs Fnatic

Casters: Sadokist & HenryG

More information Astralis vs. Fnatic Scores, Team ...

Virtus.pro vs SK Gaming

Casters: James Bardolph & ddk

The two-time defending champions in SK Gaming will faced off against Virtus.pro for the third Major in a row, with SK squeaking past Virtus.pro in both of those prior series.

More information Virtus.pro vs. SK Gaming Scores, Team ...

Finals

Casters: Anders Blume & Semmler

After five quarterfinal and four semifinal eliminations, the roster of Astralis finally made the a grand finals at a Major. Virtus.pro, however, had been to and won a Major final at EMS One Katowice 2014, defeating the Ninjas in Pyjamas two games to zero. Since then, Virtus.pro had not been back to a grand finals.

The first map was Nuke, a map Virtus.pro was considered very strong on. Astralis would tie the game at 12 rounds apiece, but Virtus.pro won the next four rounds, taking the first map 16–12. Snax and byali lead the way for the Polish team with 24 kills while Kjaerbye lead Astralis with 22 kills and gla1ve and dev1ce had 20 kills.

The second map was Overpass. Virtus.pro took the lead for the first time since round one at 14–13 and were two rounds away from taking the Major. However, Astralis won the last three rounds, taking Overpass 16–14. Xyp9x was the most impactful with 28 kills. dev1ce had the least kills of either team with only 13 kills.

The final map, Train, was historically known as one of Virtus.pro's strongest. After a strong Virtus.pro start, Astralis made a late comeback, tying the score at 14 and taking their first lead at 15–14. After winning the final round of regulation, Astralis was crowned the champion of the ELEAGUE Atlanta Major. Kjaerbye had 29 kills in the final map,[25][26] and was named the Major MVP; he became the youngest player to earn the title.[27]

More information Astralis vs. Virtus.pro Scores, Team ...

Final standings

The final standings are shown below. The in-game leaders of each team are shown first.

More information Place, Prize money ...

Post-Major Ranking

The HLTV.org January 30, 2017 rankings of teams in the major is displayed below. The ranking was the first one released after the ELEAGUE Major.[28]

More information World Ranking, Place ...
HLTV.org Post-major Ranking

Change since January 23, 2017 ranking

Clash for Cash

ELEAGUE announced a televised rematch, dubbed the "Clash for Cash", between the two finalists on June 16, 2017.[29] It featured a US$250,000 prize pool for the winner.[30] Despite losing the first map in the best-of-three, Astralis dominated the last two maps and took the match.[31]

More information Astralis vs. Virtus.pro Scores, Team ...

References

  1. "ELEAGUE to Host CS:GO Major Championship". ELEAGUE. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  2. Chiu, Stephen. "Retrospective of the Majors: Lineups with 2 Major Wins and Players with 3". VPEsports. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  3. Kovanen, Tomi. "Why CS:GO needs major events". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  4. Bektaş, Bünyamin. "Swiss format at ELEAGUE Major". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  5. "ELEAGUE Major 2017". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  6. @ELEAGUETV (January 12, 2017). "The #ELEAGUEMajor Talent line-up" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  7. "Major Qualifier Recap – ELEAGUE". ELEAGUE. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  8. Louchnikov, Aleksei (November 18, 2016). "Vega Squadron sign ALL-IN". GosuGamers.
  9. "Here's Why Dignitas Released Their CSGO Roster". PVP Live. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  10. "Ex-Dignitas coach says players chose not to stay with org". The Score eSports. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  11. Robichaud, Andrew (December 20, 2016). "Report: F.C. Copenhagen eyeing esports rosters". TSN. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  12. Wolf, Jacob (January 3, 2017). "F.C. Copenhagen signs ex-Dignitas CS:GO team, launches new brand". ESPN. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  13. "fnatic and GODSENT change three". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  14. "KRiMZ to fnatic, Lekr0 to GODSENT". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  15. "CS:GO Ranking | World Ranking | HLTV.org". Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  16. "Astralis vs Virtus.pro at ELEAGUE Major 2017 – HLTV.org". HLTV.org. January 29, 2017. Retrieved February 6, 2017.
  17. "GosuGamers". www.gosugamers.net. Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  18. Matus, Lord (January 29, 2017). "Markus «Kjaerbye» Kjærbye is MVP of The ELEAGUE Major 2017". EGamersWorld. Retrieved February 6, 2017.
  19. "CS:GO Ranking | World Ranking | HLTV.org". Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  20. Nordmark, Sam (May 9, 2017). "Astralis and Virtus Pro will battle for $250,000 in ELEAGUE showdown". Dot Esports. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  21. Villanueva, Jamie (June 17, 2017). "Astralis earn $250,000 by defeating Virtus Pro in ELEAGUE Clash for Cash". Dot Esports. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  22. Mira, Luis (June 16, 2017). "Astralis win ELEAUGE Clash for Cash". HLTV.org. Retrieved July 26, 2017.

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