Inero – 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 Inero – 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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Roster Reaction: Tectonic Shift https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/01/14/roster-reaction-tectonic-shift/ Sun, 14 Jan 2018 15:58:19 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=416 After finalising its divorce from the Tainted Minds organisation with a brief stopover as “TM Gaming”, the New Zealand-based Tectonic returns two of its starters into a roster filled with inexperience and coaches in roughly equal measure. As Tainted Minds/TM Gaming’s 2017 progressed, they started spritely under the Inero-led roster featuring three veterans, Praedyth and NA import Cake, but after the dissolution of that roster, they won only a single match for the rest of the year. Tectonic enters 2018 with an incredibly young roster with real questions over its in-game leadership and watching them will be an interesting examination of just how much youthful exuberance can counteract the absence of experience.

Tectonic received a bit of grief online for their plan with coaching staff, despite it more-or-less resembling what you would see in major orgs overseas, at least as far as structure goes. The team has assembled positional coaches that you may have seen around on the internet in the coaching arena. While this is akin to the staffing structure that Team SoloMid had at one stage, dedicating positional coaches to midgame and teamfighting and getting a separate coach for early game seems to be a bit of cross-pollination of focus. It’s this “too many cooks spoil the broth” risk that saw them catch a few jokes at their expense. The point of bringing up this coaching fiasco is that it all seems to leave little responsibility to their retained Head Coach Jonny “Saiclone” Weatherly. Known as an innovator of unique ideas and strategies, one would hope that it will be his job to solely focus on the strategical play of his team and that his positional coaches will handle the player skill development. By all accounts I know of Saiclone is a popular coach with his players which is an important trait when it comes to a roster such as this. The trust they build between each other will be vital when it comes to facing the challenges that inevitably come the way of inexperienced rosters. The one standout critique of Saiclone is that TM Gaming had a mechanically sound roster in Split 2 that utterly stagnated as a unit and collectively was not any better when they finished than when they started. It will be up to Saiclone and the rest of the staff he has assembled to show Tectonic fans that he has this capability with this newly retooled roster.

 

Looking first at their carry-over players, and their AD Carry Omar “Low” Abouelkheir, Low was one of the few successes of TM Gaming and it is nice to see him retain his place for the new season. Indeed, even the Dire Wolves noted that he had…well it’s hard to say exactly what they meant but the approximate point is that Low was the only player who seemed to improve at all over the split. It’s a testament to the hard work he put in, and no small amount of credit can be given to what he learned from his former botlane partner in tgun who also brought similar improvement out of Raid and Crayzee in their first splits with the Esports veteran now playing StarCraft. Low had a couple strong Twitch games and only seemed to consistently struggle to farm lined up against FBI and SIN so has all the makings of a competent if not flashy secondary carry.

 

Slightly more perplexing is retaining mid laner Ari “Shok” Greene-Young. Shok’s highlights included a couple of highlight Orianna ultimates, giving rise to the “Shok-wave” line that followed him around during Split 2. But overall these moments were few and far between and he was dealing nowhere near enough damage to be relied upon as a carry threat, and lost lane far too hard to counteract the utility he provided on the Karma and Galio picks that were frequently his. If Tectonic wanted to retain a control mage player who has a decent Orianna and Karma and has a pocket Zilean, then they already had Wzrd in Split 1 2017 and he rode the bench all last split for TM Gaming…and Wzrd is strictly better version of Shok. Make no mistake, Shok is in this team as a New Zealander representing a New Zealand-based org. There’s nothing wrong with putting a New Zealander on an NZ org in the abstract, on the contrary I think it adds a wonderful identity to the org overall. But when it comes to putting the strongest possible roster onto the rift, then for my money it’s not a good selection metric.

 

Joining Low in the botlane is Isaac “Tilting” Bellamy. Historically we’ve seen Tilting on mage supports and he is famous for his pocket Sona pick. Tilting returns to the OPL after last appearing on the 2017 Split One Tainted Minds roster, replacing Broler and was uninspiring in his performances. He spent Split 2 with Legacy Genesis in the OCS and was at the forefront of the blow-up involving stand-in coach Burstfire while the rest of the org was away at Rift Rivals. It is hard to judge that team’s performance too harshly, as an incident like that is sure to destabilize any team. It will be up to Tilting to show that with preparation for a full split rather than just the fill-in duty he’s performed in the past that he is more than just an OCS player.

 

Tectonic completed their roster with two additions from the highly successful Abyss Academy OCS roster. I don’t know a lot about these two players, jungler Ryan “Swathe” Gibbons and wunderkind top laner Daniel “Papryze” Francis. I have watched Papryze a bit in Solo Q and he is rightfully touted as the next Pabu – a pro-ready top laner who has a wide skillset that if develops could fill the void of talent that exists in Oceania once you get past Swip3rr, Tally and Chippys. For Swathe’s part, he didn’t blow me away in the OCS finals that I watched, but he seemed to have a reasonable sense on how to play the pro-style game, more so than a lot of high-elo SoloQ junglers I watched. This is what I’d assign his reasonable Rek’Sai performances in that series to. The other thing I thought he did well is that he got his laners into the game, which is great when you have such a dynamic threat like Papryze on the team. From a roster construction standpoint, the pair coming in together makes a little sense – when the team is likely going to time and again turn to Papryze to need to solo-carry the game to win, it makes sense to have a familiar face in his back pocket coming out of the jungle.

 

All in all, this Tectonic roster is underwhelming. I hope I’m wrong, because I am super intrigued to see Papryze in the OPL and I’m very curious to see if Low can take the step up and be a leader and show that he’s an OPL-calibre AD Carry all at the same time. I worry about Shok, and I hope this team doesn’t just become a doughnut – solid at the sides but nothing in the middle.

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