Babip – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com Oceanic Esports News & Content Tue, 06 Mar 2018 02:08:00 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://legacy.snowballesports.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-sb-favicon-32x32.png Babip – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com 32 32 Fish’s OPL Players to Watch https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/03/06/fishs-opl-players-to-watch/ Tue, 06 Mar 2018 01:10:45 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=1200 Editor note: We are very fortunate to have former OPL and current LPL Play-by-Play shoutcaster Matthew “Fish” Stewart bring to us his squad of OPL players to watch. Despite what Fish will tell you, the opinions of a “play by play monkey” are really interesting because there’s so much more that goes into a league team than just how they click their buttons. As we have seen time and again in regions all over the world, roster composition, leadership, and team chemistry are so important and this is something any caster, not just the colour caster can draw on their observations, knowledge and experience to tell us about.


Full disclaimer, I am first and foremost a play-by-play monkey. I talk about all the things that happen when they happen. If you asked me how or why my first instinct would be to shout ‘Spawn! This guy has a question for smart people.’ (Never EGym though, that guy feeds in every solo Q game I get.) Since joining the LPL team, I have not been able to keep up with every game played in the OPL. But I have been able to watch quite a few matches before the LPL broadcasts.

Top: Brandon “Swip3rr” Holland
I had the pleasure of working with Big Swips during the League of Legends: State of Origin tournament. Well known for his tank play, the Armoured Titan has been able to show that he can play carry oriented champions too. With Gangplank nerfs and the resurgence of tanks like Sion in the top lane, Big Swips will be a force to be reckoned with in the Top Lane.

The man has an incredible work ethic. He is always looking to see how he can improve himself, on and off the rift.

Honourable Mention: Jackson “Pabu” Pavone
The young gun who was hyped up for a long time as a mechanical genius now has one full professional split under his belt. This will be an important split to track Pabu’s performance to see how much of the hype he had leading up to his professional career follows through.

 

Jungle: Brandon “Juves” Defina
While casting the OPL, Juves and Carbon stuck out as the ultimate ‘leaders’ for a team. Constantly looking to mentor younger players and constantly allowing them to grow. They always made sure to provide the emotional backbone, leadership and support their teams needed.

Carbon’s ‘old man hands’ as he likes to call them means we now see him sitting down on the couch – more talking about the OPL than actually playing. (I am upset that there is no VB in his hands when doing so.) This leaves Juves as the last of the two major leaders in the League.

His ability to mentor talent has a proven track record as the likes of FBI & Rogue started with SIN Gaming. Ryoma had a great split with the team before moving back to the Chiefs, where he came from as a substitute for Swiffer.

Split 1 2018 has been rough for SIN, especially in comparison to the multiple “Sinderella” Runs and Rift Rivals performance that we saw from the squad last year. All eyes will be on the veteran Juves to turn things around.

Honourable Mention: Leo “Babip” Romer
Every Legacy game last split, I would wonder “Is this the week we will see Babip step in for Carbon and start his professional career with Legacy?” Babip was mentored by Carbon and a star player for their OCS team. Now starting for the Chiefs rebuilt roster, it will be interesting to watch how much of an impact Babip provides in The Chiefs climb back to the top.

 

Mid: Stephen “Triple” Li and Tommy “Ryoma” Le
There is no honourable mention here; these are my players to watch in the Mid lane. They were the underdogs in 2017, in the shadows of the likes of Phantiks, Swiffer and Claire. Now it’s their time in the spotlight. Both have helped their team to the top of the table halfway through split one.

Triple has made his way to the Dire Wolves and had big shoes to fill. Phantiks finished 2017 as the best player in the OPL. So far, Triple has adapted to the Dire Wolves well and the pack has yet to drop a set in the OPL. One of the mean reasons Triple did not make an appearance at Origin was due to Ryoma being able to provide synergy with FBI.

Ryoma had a large impact in the performance that Sin had during 2017 as well as the 2nd place finish for NSW in Origin last year. He is quiet in comparison to other Mids in the league, often providing only crucial information to the team, but is attentive and listens to calls. He is flanked by the vocal Destiny and Swip3rR this split which will allow him to do what he does best, listen to the team, focus on the mid lane and destroy his opponents.

 

Bottom Lane: Victor “FBI” Huang & Jake “Rogue” Sharwood
Last split, I was very vocal in thinking that this was hands down the best bottom lane in the league. Which was a bold statement to make when the likes of Lost & Cupcake, Raes & EGym, Blinky & Jayke and King & Destiny were around in 2017. Their synergy is unmatched, both FBI and Rogue are incredibly skilled when it comes to mechanics and have been working together for a few splits now.

Although FBI made a few critical errors last split, he seems to have honed in on his decision making for 2018. Rogue just gets better and better with each split. It was a tough choice to not pick him up for Origin 2017, instead going for EGym for the synergy with Coach Jish and Swip3rR. (Big mistake, EGym’s Tahm Kench cost me 20 Elo. Should have benched him and let Tgun play.)

Order now sit top of the Table and have only dropped a single set. Impressive for an organisation’s first split in the OPL. A lot of their power comes from this bottom lane duo and I believe that will continue.

Honourable Mention: Myles “Blinky” Irvine & Jayke “Jayke” Paulsen
The Bash Bros are still at it and are the only other bottom lane pairing left from 2017. They started 2017 strong but didn’t end the year well. They have had a decent showing so far in 2018. Tracking their performance to see if they can reverse the trend from last year will definitely impact Avant’s performance.

These are the people I think will be interesting to watch in 2018. Why Snowball trusted a washed up dyslexic play-by-play shoutcaster from the LPL to write this? I don’t know. But at least I don’t feed in Solo Q.  Which EGym is great at.

 

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Roster Reaction: The Chiefs – Manifest Destiny https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/01/12/roster-reaction-the-chiefs-manifest-destiny/ Fri, 12 Jan 2018 04:18:16 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=403 The Chiefs golden era has come to end and what a spectacular experience it was for the OCE viewers to enjoy. Since esports’ infancy in the region the Chiefs have left a massive footprint in the oceanic landscape, with 4 back to back split victories, tantalizing and heartbreaking misses at international events, all while keeping the same core players throughout which is almost unheard of in esports.

 

However 2017 was the first year the organisation was unable to find success a strange feeling to the viewers who were so accustomed to the Chiefs dominance, this unfortunately marked the end of an era as this offseason 3 long serving Chiefs members decided to part way with the organisation. With such an overhaul of the starting 5, for the first time in a long time Chiefs fans could find themselves with a lot of unknowns, they can no longer expect Spookz to be in Swiffer’s back pocket of the mid lane or EGym to make his aggressive roams. Luckily for the Chiefs and their fans, they have quickly retooled their lineup to give themselves a genuine shot at the success that has been their birthright.

With the new year, new Chiefs line up, what can fans expect in the coming year? I’ll start with the bot-lane.

 

Unfortunately Raes has found himself on the wrong end of a 2 weeks suspension, but the Chiefs bottom half of the map is incredibly strong, Destiny is a force to be reckoned with and fans were left in awe of Raes pentakills. The Chiefs success this year will be driven from this bottom lane, it is a lane that should expect to have resources funnelled into it and be ahead most games. On top of this you could probably expect Destiny to pick up the shotcalling duties for the team. If this botlane can’t get the advantages it needs to carry the games, the Chiefs maybe in for a very average season.

 

One of the core members the Chiefs have retained is Swip3rR for the top lane. Big Swips has been one of the most meta-resistant top laners the region has ever seen and could partly be attributed to the Chiefs long lasting success, he can play tanks, carries, and split pushers…he really does do it all. The problem is now that top lane talent is starting to really rise in talent and it’s no longer a tier list of 2 top laners for the region, Chippys had a breakout 2017 and foreign imports have really filled the regions talent gap.

 

The final two spots, Jungle and Midlane is where the biggest changes have been made for the Chiefs, it’s also where the most uncertainty lies in their performance.

The prodigal son Ryoma, once a Chiefs substitute has now returned to the throne after a massive season with SIN having the biggest breakout performance of any player in 2017. However the question remains whether he can back this performance in a new team with a different patch that maybe less favourable to his champion pool.

 

While in the Jungle they’ve stolen what many would have seen as Carbons successor at Legacy, their long-time sub Babip. Babip has plenty of competitive experience at an OCS level with Legacy Genesis but so far to date has no experience in the OPL which leaves most OPL viewers unsure what style of jungling to expect, whatever the case he’s definitely been groomed for success on the top stage and shouldn’t take too long to find his feet.

 

Chiefs have also made a change in coaching structure with retired Dire Wolves mid laner Phantiks appointed as the new head coach. Phantiks in his retirement tweet did mention his passion and desire to become a coach, while not completely unexpected to find himself in this position, being a head coach for such an experienced organisation feels a little premature.

 

I was able to ask few questions to Phantiks about how he has found the transition from dominant mid-laner to coach, he believes his biggest strengths as a coach are drawn from his experiences as a competitive player along with “very player first focused dynamic” which he believes he can leverage to ensure the individual skill level of his players reach great heights. I continued to press him about the high expectations Chiefs fans may have, whilst he admitted last year could be seen as a disappointment for the fans, he has assured me that it’s in his nature to be a competitor and has a constant desire to win, this year will be no different with intentions to lead the Chiefs to an OPL title.

 

Chiefs have the building blocks of a great squad, third place is the absolute minimum for this organisation, however I think people have been over-inflating the tyres Dire Wolves and Order wagon, so if that comes to pass this team really does have the potential to do damage when we get to the pointy end of the season.

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