EGym – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com Oceanic Esports News & Content Fri, 23 Feb 2018 02:47:17 +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 EGym – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com 32 32 Pick 6: Nick “Inero” Smith https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/02/23/pick-6-nick-inero-smith/ Fri, 23 Feb 2018 01:00:30 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=996

Nick “Inero” Smith is one of the greatest coaching minds to grace the Oceanic landscape. In Jake “Spawn” Tiberi’s Pick 6 interview, he called Inero “the one that got away”.

After a brief stint at Tainted Minds showing some initial promise in his short stay, to then move into the NALCS with Echo Fox, he currently finds himself in 1st place at the half-way point of the split. He talked to us about his journey from the OPL to the top of the NALCS.

How does someone go from OPL head coach to becoming the head coach for the LCS? Take us through that journey.

It was a bit of a weird one. I was recommend by a player for an opportunity at Echo Fox that had opened up right after I was cleared from the Tainted Minds situation. It was very last minute, and I had to say quick goodbyes to a lot of people that I cared about in Australia, but I knew I couldn’t turn down working for Echo Fox. Although I was originally just brought on board to work with the NACS team, the teams were merged and I was put in as one of the coaches for the LCS team about a week or so before the start of the split.

A lot of people would consider themselves League of Legends experts. If they want to get into coaching, what advice could you give to get started?

I really don’t know what to say to help people get started with becoming a coach. It’s something I just stumbled into and I’m constantly learning how I can improve and make myself better at it. Networking and building your brand are two huge things for actually finding a job in the scene with the way it is right now. Also, being open minded and humble will help you grow as a coach. I see a lot of people come in and get huge egos after a bit of success in whatever league they’re in and that usually doesn’t bode well for them. Realizing that you’re not this wild mastermind coach, and that you have even more room for growth than a player does, is extremely important.

What is it like working under Rick Fox, how influential has he been for you as a coach?

Rick is amazing, really. You run into a few people in life that are able to just steal everyone’s attention with the way they speak and the words they say, and Rick is one of them. Whenever he has these sit-down talks with players/staff, you can tell his heart is really invested in everything he’s telling you and it makes it so easy to get on board with what he’s saying. Being that type of mentor for a younger generation of coaches and players is something that I one day hope to be.

You're having a great split so far, what do you attribute to this success to?

Our staff’s approach to the scouting/recruitment part of the off-season paid off heavily. We managed to get an incredibly talented group of guys that all had a similar mindset, and that really carries everything. We had a few different roster scenarios that could have played out, but we placed a large amount of importance on how well the personalities and desires of everyone would mesh. With how our practice has gone, and the success we’ve seen, I think it’s pretty fair to say our assessment of this group of guys was correct. Huni, Dardoch, Fenix, Altec, and Adrian are all great to work with and they truly deserve the success they’re seeing so far.

You currently have Lost on Echo Fox's Academy team and coached Tally over the break, what is it about Oceanic players that catch your eye?

The reason we looked at Oceanic players in the off-season was really just to gauge the strength of the region’s players as a whole by bringing over a few guys we knew were good. We reached out to a few teams to get their boys to come over, but Legacy were the only ones to get back to us. I didn’t have contacts or a real good grasp on what players in other wildcard regions were like, so OCE was the easiest target for me. In esports like CSGO and COD, you see players from countries like Brazil and Australia find a lot more success internationally than you do in League of Legends. There are definitely players in those regions that could compete in the LCS someday, but it’s really hard to break in and get a chance here. I’m very hopeful that the franchised league will make opportunities for those players more available in the future, but it’ll take some time.

If you had to Pick 6 players who have ever played OPL with the goals of competing in the NALCS, who is in your squad?

Ok I’m gonna include a runner up in each position too because it’s really hard to say with a lot of the guys, but it’s usually clear who the top 2 are. I’m also omitting all my old teammates because I’m biased…

Coach: Aaron “ChuChuZ” Bland

Aaron is the smartest individual in the whole world and there’s nothing he does not know and also I love Penny.

Top: Tally

Runner up – Chippys

This one is really a toss up for me between him and Chippys. I think Chippys is an amazing player in OCE and I’m sure he could compete in NALCS easily. I hope he finds his way over soon too. I just know more about Tally outside of the game and how he approaches learning and improving, and I know he’d grow a lot as a player with stronger people to practice against every week.

Jungle – Shernfire

Runner up – Only

He’s the most dominant jungler in OCE. I don’t think anyone else is able to really match him consistently over there. I’m hopeful that Only will keep getting better and be able to match him someday.

Mid – Phantiks

Runner up – Swiffer

He’s nuts, man. I wish he kept up with playing. Him and Swiffer both could come over to NALCS and keep up with everyone there.

ADC – Lost

Runner up – K1ng

I mean, I already brought Lawrence over. I’ve never met someone with a mentality as good as his. I have no doubt in my mind that Lawrence will compete in the NALCS some day. K1ng and FBI are the next two that would be on my list, but I haven’t paid much attention to ADC there recently. K1ng just has more experience so I’d go with him.

Support – EGym

Runner up – Destiny

Imagine being Bryce “EGym” Paule and stopping the success train just to hang out with Spawn all day. I actually contacted Frank when I was in Mousesports to try and import Bryce over to there for the EUCS. They came over for a bootcamp and I was pretty impressed by him. I guess now he’ll just be the next guy to leave OCE for a big casting job instead. Other than him, I also thought Destiny and Cupcake were great.

Catch Inero’s Echo Fox in the NALCS face off against TSM this Sunday 25th at 11:00am AEDT on Twitch.

Follow Nick on Twitter @inerolol
Images courtesy of Riot Games/NALCS
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EGym Season Preview https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/01/19/egym-season-preview/ Thu, 18 Jan 2018 21:30:07 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=587

Overall, the addition of Order to the league has thrown the top end of the ladder into disarray more so than any other offseason in the OPL to date.

Based purely on past individual performances, and theoretical speculation in regards to how these new lineups will mesh, I think the league will be broken into three distinct tiers with some wiggle room at the edges.

The Teams

Avant Gaming

Avant for the longest time have struggled to break into the top echelon of Oceanic League of Legend teams; with the roster shake up of the 2017 top four, the 2018 season could be where Av make a break for it.  

On an individual level Pabu is an upgrade on Ceres with potential to grow, which is what they needed considering their best looking player in 2017 in Triple has joined the Wolves.  Frae has belonged to many homes surrounding the OPL, the latest of which is Abyss Academy with a 2nd place finish in Split 2 2017.  Out of all free agent mid laners, Frae sits at the top of the list and accompanying him on 2018 Av is ex-TM Gaming jungler Only.  Only serves as a comparable replacement for Sybol with an inverse tendency towards carry junglers to that of Sybol’s tanks, and is coming off of a winless latter half of 2017 despite being one of the better performing members of the struggling TM.  The rock that AV’s roster sits upon is the bottom lane duo of Blinky and Jayke and they’ve shown steady improvement over the course of their time together.  

AV has always been a team that at their best comes together as something much greater than the sum of their parts, and this roster looks to be sticking to that mantra.

Prediction: 4-6

Bombers

The Bombers’ success in my eyes rests largely on the performance of their imports, with the backing of the Essendon Football Club they bring in two European players previously from the same team (ROG School) in Tiger and Sleeping.  

Sleeping presents as a definitive carry threat, replacing ZZZ as the OPL’s resident Riven player; as of the time this was written he has played 26 games of Oceanic SoloQ and not a single game has been on a tank.  Tiger on the other hand seems to favour utility, with the exception of his penchant for Lucian. This in theory meshes quite well Rosey’s often unique take on bot lane.  Seb and Rosey both had moments of success in the 2017 season, however they both sit optimistically middle of the pack on a role to role comparison with their peers.  Looch has been the crux of the Abyss lineup for a long time and we see him returning again for 2018, however given that mid lane is the most competitive role in the region the competition will be tough.  

I don’t see the Bombers’ fighting for the trophy in the upcoming season without a huge performance from Tiger and Sleeping, but I don’t see them fighting in relegations like they have in the past either.

Prediction: 4-6

Chiefs

For a team that once held the global record for the longest standing trio of players, the Chiefs roster for 2018 has had a tremendous shakeup.  

What Ryoma lacks compared to Swiffer in leadership, he makes for up in raw talent and given the work he put in for Sin during the 2017 season will serve as one of the stars of this new look Chiefs lineup.  Babip is almost completely untested territory, being a long time sub for Legacy however receiving next to no game time at the professional level.  For Chiefs to succeed this season the stability of retaining Swip3rR and Raes alongside the addition of Destiny need to provide a working environment to bring Babip up to speed.  The jungle is the fulcrum that balances the map for many teams and losing long time jungler Spookz for an untested rookie could be their downfall, or not, only time will tell.  

The Chiefs have an incredibly sturdy backbone in Swip3rR and Destiny with immense carry potential coming from mid, ADC and jungle; regardless of roster changes I still expect to see them be a top three team in the region.

Prediction: 1-3

Dire Wolves

The Dire Wolves have (on paper) downgraded in both of their roster changes this offseason.  

Losing the MVP of the league in Phantiks meant they were always going to downgrade mid lane and Triple was certainly one of the best options for replacement available in the OPL at the time.  Cupcake brings a particular niche to the Dire Wolves, a player who has mostly favoured his own take on the game rather than being a strict meta slave as we saw him trailblaze both Bard and Brand during times neither were considered top tier.  Losing the versatility of Destiny to the Chiefs will hurt the Wolves, but not too badly considering their worthy replacement.  

Overall the Dire Wolves still hold a lot of star power in Shern and Chippys, and I hope to see K1ng carry his form from Worlds into next year following his lacklustre domestic performance.  This offseason certainly hasn’t done the reigning champions any favours however I fully expect Dire Wolves to still be a top team defending their title in 2018.

Prediction: 1-3

Legacy

Another top team going through huge roster changes is Legacy, losing long time jungler and captain Carbon to retirement, top laner Tally to ORDER and star player Lost to NA.  

Throughout the course of the year Legacy played increasingly more around their bot lane, more specifically Lost, leaving either huge shoes to fill for Raid or spelling large stylistic changes for the team as a whole.  Sybol had an inconsistent 2017 Split 2 on Avant, but with much more competitive and stage experience sees his place on the main roster over long time sub Babip.  Losing not only their leader in Carbon, but co-captain in long time top laner Tally will hurt the roster, but bringing in a Korean born import in Mimic could be exactly what they need.  From the little I’ve seen from his time on Millenium in the EUCS and soloqueue, Mimic is much more of a TP top laner than a carry player which should open things up for the rest of the map.  Legacy retain Claire as a mid comparable to the best in the region, and I sincerely hope the real Claire gets to spread his wings instead of being rostered on to Karma duty for another split.  

Raid comes off a reasonably successful individual split from Abyss and is joined by technically-not-a-rookie-but-still-a-rookie support Decoy rounding out Legacy’s bottom lane; I don’t see them contesting for best in the region right off the bat but serve as a solid baseline for growth throughout the year.

Prediction: 4-6

Order

Oceania’s very first super team comprising of top talent from 3 different 2017 playoff contention teams.  Buying the OPL slot from the eternally struggling Regicide, Order comes in as a newcomer and almost single handedly accounts for most of the roster changes amongst the other top tier teams.  

Every player on this roster is at minimum considered top 3 in their respective role. however being one of the few top teams not travelling to Korea for a pre-split bootcamp they may have a slow start to the season.  Furthering this potential slow start comes the news of Tally’s inability to practice until 3 weeks prior to their first match due to a back injury.

With the leadership between long time partners Spookz and Swiffer, the raw talent of the dominant ex-Sin bot lane and the versatility of a top laner able to play both carry and utility playstyles, Order look to simultaneously come in as newbies and potential favourites for 2018.

Prediction: 1-3

Sin Gaming

Sin (and specifically Juves) aren’t an organisation unaccustomed to sweeping roster changes and this year is no different.  

Losing their entire carry arsenal: Ryoma to Chiefs and bot lane duo to ORDER see’s Sin rebuilding their roster with a mixture of soloqueue talent, OCS talent and names we’ve seen around the OPL before.  Praedyth coming in replacing Dhokla who has moved back to NA, is a decent player filling a similar role to his predecessor with his split pushing inclination.  Bdoink is a name already associated with Sin’s OCS squad, he promotes to the main team by way of Athletico and on a good day has the potential to challenge the best mids in the region however will most likely be seen as an underdog in most of his matchups.  Dream, a previously unknown player taken straight of soloqueue flew himself to Korea alone for 2 months to practice at the age of 17 prior to this season.  What he lacks in experience he bleeds in drive and coupled with Cuden, a player that has floated around the OPL without finding a permanent home will provide a serviceable bottom lane.  

Juves, the veteran and only player remaining from the 2017 roster will have his work cut out for him in 2018 bringing this brand new roster to the heights he’s used to.

Prediction: Position 7

Tectonic

Unfortunately in my eyes TM Gaming’s now called Tectonic roster is not too much of an improvement on their from 8th place 2017 finish.  

Retaining both carry players Shok and Low for the 2018 season sees a change in the supportive roles around them.  Losing Praedyth to Sin sees a comparable replacement coming in from the OCS in Papryze, and accompanying him is another OCS player from the same team (Abyss Academy) in Swathe.  Praedyth and Only were often relied upon by the 2017 roster as the bot side of the map faltered, so in the context of Tectonic these two players have the biggest shoes to fill.  Tilting has some OPL experience already from his time on TM and should be a slight improvement over Tgun.  

On paper it seems this roster lacks a strong leader, and given the amount of playstyle shifts we saw from them last year it will be interesting to see what style Tectonic settle on.

Prediction:  Position 8

Summary

We have the top dogs in Order, Dire Wolves and Chiefs, these teams have the right mix of talent, infrastructure and experience to be contenders for the title in Split 1.  AV, Bombers and Legacy make up the core of the league with potential to upset the top 3 on a good day, however on average fall slightly short of the mark in the areas required to be OPL Champions.  Lastly we have Sin and Tectonic to round out the league, they both have large amounts of room to grow and I think will spend most of their efforts ramping up to peak later on in the year.

In saying all this, it’s purely speculation.  We’ve yet to see a single one of these teams face off with one another, and I hope I’m left eating my words when the season starts on the 20th.  Dire Wolves might just win literally everything for the entire year again, Bombers’ imports could be the best individual players we’ve seen in Oceania to date, or Tectonic might just shock everyone and start knocking teams off the list week after week.  Whatever happens I’m excited to see all these offseason changes come to fruition from a brand new angle.

Be sure to tune in and watch EGym this Saturday 20th January at 2pm AEDT for his full time broadcasting debut!

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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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OPL Take 5: Week One, Split 2 2017 https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2017/06/09/opl-take-5-week-one-split-2-2017/ Fri, 09 Jun 2017 06:16:06 +0000 https://snowballesports.com//?p=5 Welcome to the Take 5, which provides 5 Takes of variable spiciness for each week of the OPL season. This week: Week 1 of Split 2, 2017!

 

5) Dr Only or Only Hyde?

By all accounts Tainted Minds jungler Only had the breakout performances his widely touted potential had promised during League of Origin. This is fantastic news for him and encouraging news for a Tainted Minds roster looking to emerge from the mire they found themselves in during split one.

A stable presence in the jungle will be just the starting point that TM fans would like to see, as some torrid early games hindered their efforts as split one progressed. Only turned in what were at-times putrid performances, including getting thoroughly manhandled in one game by his lightning-rod of a rookie jungler counterpart from Exile 5 in Guts before rallying to take that set. He’ll want to leave his Split 1 performance behind him and carry his Origin performance into the split. To that end, it’s good that he was able to work closely with tgun while on NSW duties and the two will look to form a strong pairing to accompany rising top lane star Praedyth.

 

4) Abyss have almost run out of excuses

After picking up a major sponsor and the recent announcement of their ownership investment, this roster, like TM, then secured a young promising top laner and stable veteran support to solidify their squad. The pieces are all there to finally succeed after sixth (after tiebreakers, don’t give me that tied-for-4th PISH when you 0-2 the tiebreaker games) and seventh-place finishes in their first two OPL splits. Looch and Pabu are encouraging solo lane talent, and Rosey is for my money one of the two or three best choices they could have made to unlock the Split 2 2016 edition of Raid. The only remaining question mark was Seb, who was unquestionably one of the 2-3 worst performing players in the entire league last split. If Seb can have a bounce-back performance, then the team is all but set. With that said, though, I remain to be convinced by Looch’s return and I’m far from encouraged by Seb, who is best described as erratic. I would love to be wrong about this, so I’m excited to see them show it on the rift but if they don’t end up getting it together they may have scant few excuses left to account for why.

 

3) Don’t sleep on the big two top laners

Somewhat lost in the shuffle of the oceanic top lane this split were the historical big two top laners of Swip3rr and Tally. While neither had the breakout split or got to take home the trophy as Chippys did, both veterans brought a deceptively high level of play. Tally seemed to undergo a transformative period in he produced more and more assured tank play. His engages sometimes left a little to be desired but beyond that Tally really began to reach a new level where competency became proficiency. This move to evolve his level on a multitude of play styles indicated an acknowledgement of one of the real strengths of Swip3rr that Tally would benefit from adding to his game.

For his part, Swip3rr continued to display his usual level of play that I feel has become underappreciated. For my money, Swip3rr is still the most meta-resistant top laner in the region and has a deep understanding of how to carry his team when he is not actively carrying the game. Looking back at the gauntlet and comparing how he and Ceres each handled a Fizz with an early lead really shows the stark difference between Swip3rr and OPL top laners not named Swip3rr, Tally, or Chippys. Swip3rr’s big advantage is that he puts up respectable numbers while earning a comparative pittance of gold. The big two Oceanic stars may have a new challenger in Chippys but as impressive as the Dire Wolf has been he’s still not yet the five-tool players in the region that Swip3rr and Tally are.

 

2) Gut-check time for The Chiefs

The Chiefs have lost games before. The Chiefs have lost series before. The Chiefs have lost playoff games before. Admittedly not many of each, but never before had they lost a playoff series in Oceania, as anyone who watches the OPL is keenly aware. Until Sin, that is. Sin Gaming put forward a workmanlike first two games, running a train through The Chiefs’ bottom lane before The Chiefs spectacularly regained momentum in two bruising victories to knot the series at two. But then uncharacteristically the Chiefs, like a 24-hour McDonalds, didn’t close. They were unable to counteract the mounting pressure of the Fizz elsewhere on the map and got smothered out of the game. As gutting as it would have been the series loss also presents a fantastic opportunity for The Chiefs to really show their quality and put out a display of mental resilience that they’ve not yet needed to show. History has told us that The Chiefs take losses personally and I think they’ll come into this split with a chip on their shoulder and a lot to prove.

 

1) Dire Wolves vs. Chiefs HYPE~!

This series is, not to put too fine a point on it, going to bloody pop off. The final standings from last split coupled with the performance of the two teams would indicate that it may not be a particularly close series. However the deeper you dig back through the split, the more exciting it gets as you realize the number of unanswered questions this series still has. The prevailing logic that would lean towards a Chief win is “Form is temporary, class is permanent” but the two teams didn’t meet each other in playoffs so even form is misleading to an extent. What jumps off the page is that the Chiefs squad that the Dire Wolves wiped the floor with in what was the fastest series win in league history by my count is not the Chiefs that they’ll meet this weekend. To this end, one notes that the Dire Wolves have not yet beaten the main roster of the Chiefs this year, having lost to them in week one. But thinking back to their Week One meeting serves as a reminder that the Chiefs have not yet beaten this iteration of Dire Wolves either, as Shernfire was serving his two-week suspension. In fact due to the same suspension issue with Korean accounts we have not yet seen Chippys-Shernfire-Phantiks-k1ng-Destiny face off against Swip3rr-Spookz-Swiffer-Raes-EGym and that makes this series truly exciting.

 

That’s the OPL Take 5 for this week. Hit us up with what you’re excited to see for this week of games!

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