StarLadder_Major:_Berlin_2019

StarLadder Major: Berlin 2019

StarLadder Major: Berlin 2019

15th CS:GO Major Championship


The StarLadder Major: Berlin 2019, also known as StarLadder Major 2019 or Berlin 2019, was the fifteenth Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) Major Championship. It was held in Berlin, Germany from August 23 to September 8, 2019.[1][2] Fourteen teams qualified for this Major based on their placement at the previous Major, Katowice 2019, while another ten teams qualified from their respective regional qualifiers.[3] It featured a US$1,000,000 prize pool, the eighth consecutive Major with this prize pool. It was also the first time the Ukrainian-based organization StarLadder. along with its long-term Chinese partner ImbaTV, hosted a Major.[4]

Quick Facts Tournament information, Sport ...

Astralis won the final against underdogs AVANGAR to become the only team in CS:GO history to win four Majors, and the only team to win three Majors consecutively. Astralis's Nicolai "dev1ce" Reedtz was the MVP, joining coldzera as the only players to have two Major MVPs.

Background

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive 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.[5][6]

The defending champions were Astralis, after winning their second consecutive and third total Major at IEM Katowice 2019. Astralis and Fnatic entered the tournament tied for most Major titles.

Format

The Major cycle began with four Minors, or regional qualifiers: Americas, Asia, CIS, and Europe. Two teams from each qualifier moved on to the Major. In addition, because Valve reduced the number of direct Major invites from sixteen to fourteen, the third-place teams at each respective Minor advanced to a third-place qualifier that sent two more teams to the Major.

The Major featured twenty-four teams. The top eight teams from the Katowice 2019 were the Legends, and the remaining sixteen teams—the teams that placed ninth through fourteenth at Katowice and the ten teams that advanced from the Minors—were known as Challengers.

The Major was split into three stages. The first stage was the New Challengers stage, featuring all Challengers in a Swiss-system tournament: the top eight teams advanced to the next stage and the bottom eight teams were eliminated.[7] Teams in the New Challengers stage were initially given an Elo ranking based on the HLTV world rankings. Each round of matches was seeded based on this Elo system.[8] The second stage was the New Legends stage, a second Swiss-system group stage seeded in the same way. This stage featured the eight Legends from the Katowice Major and the eight teams advancing from the New Challengers stage. Like the New Challengers stage, the New Legends stage also advanced the top eight teams and eliminated the bottom eight teams. All teams from this stage except the bottom two teams earned automatic invites to the following Major. The final stage was the New Champions stage, and teams that advanced to this stage received Legends status at the following Major. This stage featured an eight team, best-of-three, single elimination bracket.

Map Pool

The map pool for this Major changed from Katowice 2019. Valve took Cache out of the map pool and announced it would be redesigned. Rather than reintroducing Cobblestone, which had been in the map pool in previous Majors, Valve added Vertigo to the competitive map pool for the first time.[9]

Maps
  • Dust II
  • Mirage
  • Inferno
  • Nuke
  • Train
  • Overpass
  • Vertigo

Minors

Each regional qualifier, called "Minors", featured eight teams. Each Minor also had a US$50,000 prize pool, with first place receiving US$30,000, second place taking in US$15,000, and third place raking in the last US$5,000. Like past recent Minors, no teams were directly invited to the Minors.[10] There is no prize pool for the third place play in. The Europe and Americas Minors will start on July 17 and last until July 21. The CIS and Asia Minors will start on July 24 and last until July 28; the third place play in will take place on July 29.

Each Minor will feature two groups of four teams in a standard, GSL format group stage. The highest and lowest seed of the group and then other two teams will play in a best of one. The winners will play in a best of three and then the losers will play in a best of three. The winner of the winner's match will qualify for the bracket stage while the loser of the loser's match will be eliminated. The last two teams in the group will play in a best of three; the winner will move on to the bracket stage and the loser will be eliminated. The bracket stage will be a four team, best of three, double elimination bracket. The top two teams will qualify for the New Challengers stage of the Major, the third place team will have another shot in the third place play-in, while the fourth place team will be eliminated.

The third place play-in will be a four team, double elimination bracket. The initial and winner's match will be a best of one while the elimination matches will be a best of three. The top three teams move on to the Major as Cloud9 lost their Major spot so the spot is replaced by a team from the third place play-in.

Americas Minor

The Americas Minor will feature six teams from North America and two teams from South America. The North American closed qualifier featured sixteen teams, with eight teams being invited and another eight teams coming from four open qualifiers. Like the Europe Minor closed qualifier, the North America qualifier was a sixteen team, double elimination, best of three bracket. Notable teams such as Luminosity Gaming, Team Envy, and Boston 2018 champions Cloud9 failed to make it to the Minor. The South America qualifier initially had eight invited teams, but DETONA Gaming's Vinicius "v$m" Moreira had a VAC ban, forcing the team to withdraw from the qualifier. The last spot was filled in by a last chance qualifier.[11]

Teams
  • eUnited (NA Closed #1–4)
  • FURIA Esports (NA Closed #1–4)
  • NRG Esports (NA Closed #1–4)
  • Team One (NA Closed #5–6)
  • Team Singularity (NA Closed #5–6)
  • Luminosity Gaming (NA Closed #7–8)[Note 1][12]
  • Sharks Esports (SA Closed #1)
  • INTZ eSports (SA Closed #2)
Notes
  1. Lazarus Gaming decide to withdraw from the Minor due to roster issues involving Braxton "swag" Pierce, who was permanently banned by Valve due to his involvement in the iBUYPOWER and NetcodeGuides.com match fixing scandal. StarLadder decided to replace the team with the two teams that placed 7th in the closed qualifier: Team Envy and Luminosity Gaming. However, Envy decided not to have a chance to attend the Major and attend Intel Extreme Masters Season XIV – Chicago, giving the spot to Luminosity.
Upper round 1Upper finalQualified
A1INTZ eSports2
B2Sharks Esports0
A1INTZ eSports0
B1NRG Esports2
B1NRG Esports2
A2FURIA Esports0
B1NRG Esports
A1FURIA Esports
Lower round 1Lower final
A1INTZ eSports1
B2Sharks Esports0A2FURIA Esports2
A2FURIA Esports2

Europe Minor

The Europe Minor closed qualifier featured sixteen teams. No teams were invited to the Minor, but eight teams were invited to the closed qualifier while another eight teams came from four open qualifiers. The closed qualifier was a sixteen team, double elimination, best of three bracket. Notable teams such as Virtus.pro, OpTic Gaming, Heroic, and Windigo Gaming did not qualify for the Minor.[13]

Teams
  • CR4ZY (Closed #1–4)
  • Fnatic (Closed #1–4)
  • mousesports (Closed #1–4)
  • North (Closed #1–4)
  • BIG (Closed #5–8)
  • NoChance (Closed #5–8)
  • Sprout (Closed #5–8)
  • Team Ancient (Closed #5–8)
Upper round 1Upper finalQualified
A1Fnatic0
B2mousesports2
B2mousesports2
A2North0
B1CR4ZY0
A2North2
B2mousesports
B1CR4ZY
Lower round 1Lower final
A2North0
A1Fnatic0B1CR4ZY2
B1CR4ZY2

Asia Minor

The Asia Minor will feature eight teams. Unlike the other Minors, the Asia Minor featured teams from six geographical regions. All qualifiers featured four invited teams with four more coming from two open qualifiers, except for the Greater China qualifier – which had sixteen teams, eight of which were invited – and the African qualifier – which had no invited teams. All qualifiers were a double elimination, best of three bracket.[14]

Teams
  • Grayhound Gaming (Oceania #1)
  • Avant Gaming (Oceania #2)
  • TYLOO (Greater China #1)
  • 5Power Gaming (Greater China #2)
  • MVP PK (East Asia)
  • ALPHA Red (Southeast Asia)
  • FFAmix (Middle East)
  • Energy Esports (Africa)
Upper round 1Upper finalQualified
A1Grayhound G.2
B2MVP PK0
A1Grayhound G.2
B1TYLOO0
B1TYLOO2
A2Avant Gaming0
A1Grayhound G
B1TYLOO
Lower round 1Lower final
B1TYLOO2
B2MVP PK2B2MVP PK0
A2Avant Gaming0

CIS Minor

The CIS Minor will feature eight teams. The CIS closed qualifier featured the same format as the other Minor qualifiers. Notable teams such as Vega Squadron, pro100, and Winstrike Team failed to make it to the Minor.[15]

Teams
  • forZe (Closed #1–4)
  • Nemiga Gaming (Closed #1–4)
  • Syman Gaming (Closed #1–4)
  • Team Spirit (Closed #1–4)
  • DreamEaters (Closed #5–8)
  • Gambit Youngsters (Closed #5–8)
  • Unique Team (Closed #5–8)
  • Warthox Esport (Closed #5–8)
Upper round 1Upper finalQualified
A1forZe2
B2Team Spirit0
A1forZe2
A2Syman Gaming0
B1DreamEaters1
A2Syman Gaming2
A1forZe
A2Syman Gaming
Lower round 1Lower final
A2Syman Gaming2
B2Team Spirit0B1DreamEaters0
B1DreamEaters2

Minor play-in

This qualifier featured the teams that placed third in their respective Minors. This phase was a four team, best of three, double elimination bracket. The opening matches were the Asia Minor representative against the Europe Minor representative and the CIS Minor team versus the Americans Minor team. After Cloud9 forfeited its spot by not fielding the majority of its lineup from the last Major, a third team would qualify from this qualifier.[16]

Teams
  • INTZ eSports (Americas #3)
  • North (Europe #3)
  • MVP PK (Asia #3)
  • DreamEaters (CIS #3)
Upper round 1Qualified
EUNorth2
ASMVP PK0
EUNorth
CISDreamEaters
AMINTZ eSports1
CISDreamEaters2
Lower round 1Qualified
AMINTZ eSports
ASMVP PK0
AMINTZ eSports2

Broadcast Talent

The Major was streamed in various languages across Twitch. It was also streamed on StarLadder's YouTube channel, Steam.tv, and on CS:GO's in-game viewing client GOTV.

Desk Hosts

  • Tres "stunna" Saranthus
  • Matthew "Sadokist" Trivett

Interviewers

  • Sue "Smix" Lee
  • James Banks

Analysts

Commentators

  • Henry "HenryG" Greer
  • Alex "Machine" Richardson
  • Anders "Anders" Blume
  • Jason "moses" O'Toole
  • James "JFZB" Bardolph
  • Daniel "ddk" Kapadia
  • Harry "JustHarry" Russell
  • Hugo Byron[17]

Teams competing

Legends
Katowice 2019 9th–14th
Regional Qualifiers
  • forZe (CIS Minor #1)
  • Syman Gaming (CIS Minor #2)
  • mousesports (Europe Minor #1)
  • CR4ZY (Europe Minor #2)
  • Grayhound Gaming (Asia Minor #1)
  • TYLOO (Asia Minor #2)
  • NRG Esports (Americas Minor #1)
  • FURIA Esports (Americas Minor #2)
  • North (Play-in #1–2)
  • DreamEaters (Play-in #1–2)
  • INTZ eSports (Play-in #3)

New Challengers stage

The New Challengers stage took place from August 23 to August 26, 2019, at the Verti Music Hall. The Challengers stage, also known as the Preliminary stage and formerly known as the offline qualifier, is a sixteen team swiss tournament. Initial seeding was determined using HLTV.org's world rankings from March 4 to August 12, 2019. Under each of the "Rounds" columns are the team's opponent's seed at the time the round was played, out of all teams still in the tournament.

More information Place, Team ...

[19]

More information Round 1 matches ...
Round 1 scores
More information Round 2 matches ...
Round 2 scores
More information Round 3 matches ...
Round 3 scores
More information Round 4 matches ...
Round 4 scores
More information Round 5 matches ...
Round 5 scores

New Legends stage

The New Legends stage, formerly known as the Group stage, used the same format as the Challengers stage. This stage took place from August 28 to September 1, 2019, at the Verti Music Hall. Next to each team's name under the "Team" column is each team's initial seeding. Under each of the "Rounds" columns are the team's opponent's seed at the time the round was played.

More information Place, Team ...
More information Round 1 matches ...
Round 1 scores
More information Round 2 matches ...
Round 2 scores
More information Round 3 matches ...
Round 3 scores
More information Round 4 matches ...
Round 4 scores

New Champions stage

The New Champions Stage, also known as the Playoffs, is a best of three single elimination bracket. Teams play until a winner is decided. This stage took place between September 5 to September 8 at the Mercedes-Benz Arena. Brackets were revealed shortly after Natus Vincere defeated CR4ZY in the last map of the group stages. Teams were seeded first based on their record in the New Legends stage and based on the strength of their schedule. To the left of each team's name is their seed and to the right is their score.

Bracket

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                  
1 ENCE 5 12 0
8 Renegades 16 16 2
8 Renegades 19 6 0
5 AVANGAR 22 16 2
3 Team Vitality 9 16 10 1
5 AVANGAR 16 11 16 2
5 AVANGAR 6 5 0
4 Astralis 16 16 2
4 Astralis 16 16 2
7 Team Liquid 8 13 0
4 Astralis 16 16 2
2 NRG Esports 10 9 0
2 NRG Esports 16 19 2
6 Natus Vincere 12 17 0

Quarterfinals

ENCE vs. Renegades

Casters: James Bardolph & ddk

More information ENCE vs. Renegades scores, Team ...

Team Vitality vs. AVANGAR

Casters: Anders & moses

More information Team Vitality vs. AVANGAR scores, Team ...

NRG Esports vs. Natus Vincere

Casters: James Bardolph & ddk

More information NRG Esports vs. Natus Vincere scores, Team ...

Astralis vs. Team Liquid

Casters: Anders & moses

More information Astralis vs. Team Liquid scores, Team ...

Semifinals

Renegades vs. AVANGAR

Casters: James Bardolph & ddk

More information Renegades vs. AVANGAR scores, Team ...

NRG Esports vs. Astralis

Casters: Anders & moses

More information NRG Esports vs. Astralis scores, Team ...

Finals

AVANGAR vs. Astralis

Casters: Anders & moses

More information AVANGAR vs. Astralis scores, Team ...

Final standings

The final placings are shown below. In addition, the prize distribution, seed for the next major, roster, and coaches are shown. Each team's in-game leader is shown first.

More information Place, Prize Money ...

References

  1. Lewis, Jarek (February 7, 2019). "Sources: StarLadder to host 15th CS:GO Major in Berlin". Dexerto. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  2. Popat, Malav (February 18, 2019). "Official: 15th CSGO Major to be organised by StarLadder in Berlin". Talk Esport. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  3. Tadeu, Luis "MIRAA". "Official: StarLadder to host next Major in Berlin". HLTV.org. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  4. "StarLadder to host the next CS:GO Major". StarLadder. February 18, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  5. Chiu, Stephen. "Retrospective of the Majors: Lineups with 2 Major Wins and Players with 3". VPEsports. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  6. Kovanen, Tomi. "Why CS:GO needs major events". HLTV.org. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  7. Heath, Jerome (June 16, 2019). "All teams qualified for CS:GO's StarLadder Berlin Major 2019". Dot Esports. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  8. "Starladder CS:GO Major Berlin". csgomajor.starladder.com. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  9. Villanueva, Jaime (March 28, 2019). "Vertigo replaces Cache in the CS:GO Active Duty map pool". Dot Esports. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  10. Kolev, Radoslav (February 18, 2019). "It's official: StarLadder to host next CS:GO Major in Berlin". VPEsports. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  11. "Europe Minor – StarLadder Major 2019 overview". HLTV.org. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  12. "Asia Minor – StarLadder Major 2019 overview". HLTV.org. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  13. "CIS Minor – StarLadder Major 2019 overview". HLTV.org. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  14. "StarLadder Major 2019 Minor Playoff overview". HLTV.org. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
  15. Mira, Luis "MIRAA". "StarLadder Major on-air team revealed". HLTV. Retrieved August 24, 2019.
  16. "HellRaisers confirm StarLadder Major line-up". HLTV.org. Retrieved July 20, 2019.
  17. "Starladder Berlin Seeding". Retrieved August 24, 2019.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article StarLadder_Major:_Berlin_2019, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.