Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan: Difference between revisions
>Yandere-sliver No edit summary |
>Neoheart No edit summary |
||
(12 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
| name = Pro Tour ''[[Rivals of Ixalan]]'' | | name = Pro Tour ''[[Rivals of Ixalan]]'' | ||
| date = 2–4 February 2018 | | date = 2–4 February 2018 | ||
| location = {{ | | location = {{flag|ESP}} Bilbao, Spain | ||
| attendance = 465 | | attendance = 465 | ||
| format = [[Modern]] and [[Booster draft]] | | format = [[Modern]] and [[Booster draft]] | ||
| prizes = $250,000 | | prizes = $250,000 | ||
| winner = {{ | | winner = {{flag|ARG}} [[Luis Salvatto]] | ||
| prev = [[Pro Tour Ixalan| | | prev = [[Pro Tour Ixalan|''Ixalan'']] | ||
| next = [[Pro Tour Dominaria| | | next = [[Pro Tour Dominaria|''Dominaria'']] | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Pro Tour ''Rivals of Ixalan''''' was the second [[Pro Tour]] of the [[2017–18 Pro Tour Season|2017–18 season]]. It took place on 2–4 February 2018 in Bilbao, Spain. It was the return of the [[Modern]] Pro Tour, the first of its kind since [[Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch|PT ''Oath of the Gatewatch'']] in 2016. The event was won by Argentina's [[Luis Salvatto]], whose Lantern Control deck took him to victory in the final against [[Pro Tour Amonkhet|PT ''Amonkhet'']] champion [[Gerry Thompson]]. | '''Pro Tour ''Rivals of Ixalan''''' was the second [[Pro Tour]] of the [[2017–18 Pro Tour Season|2017–18 season]]. It took place on 2–4 February 2018 in Bilbao, Spain. It was the return of the [[Modern]] Pro Tour, the first of its kind since [[Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch|PT ''Oath of the Gatewatch'']] in 2016. The event was won by Argentina's [[Luis Salvatto]], whose Lantern Control deck took him to victory in the final against [[Pro Tour Amonkhet|PT ''Amonkhet'']] champion [[Gerry Thompson]]. | ||
==Format== | ==Format== | ||
Modern had not been a Pro Tour format for two years, but the Grand Prix events featuring the format were still hugely popular, and Modern events generally had the highest viewership, | Modern had not been a Pro Tour format for two years, but the Grand Prix events featuring the format were still hugely popular, and Modern events generally had the highest viewership, so it was brought back for the 2017–18 season. The banlist had been stable since the [[Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch#.22Eldrazi Winter.22|Eldrazi Winter]], having only (re-)added <c>Golgari Grave-Troll</c> - which did not destroy Dredge as a deck - and <c>Gitaxian Probe</c> - which in particular weakened Infect and Death's Shadow decks. The biggest innovation since [[Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch|PT ''Oath of the Gatewatch'']] was the development of the <c>Death's Shadow</c> strategies in early 2017, creating the newest midrange deck, with powerful threats and strong disruptive capabilities. A new player in the field was 4C or 5C Humans, using <c>Unclaimed Territory</c> and <c>Kitesail Freebooter</c> for near-perfect mana as well as combo disruption. | ||
The previous Modern GP showed a metagame development from Death's Shadow domination into big-mana Tron and Scapeshift decks, whose gameplans are difficult for Death's Shadow decks to interact with. | The previous Modern GP showed a metagame development from Death's Shadow domination into big-mana Tron and Scapeshift decks, whose gameplans are difficult for Death's Shadow decks to interact with. | ||
Line 25: | Line 24: | ||
The top eight players after day one: | The top eight players after day one: | ||
{|class="wikitable" | {|class="wikitable" | ||
!Rank | !Rank | ||
!Player | !Player | ||
!Points | !Points | ||
|- | |- | ||
!1 | |||
|{{ | |{{flag|ITA}} Adriano Moscato | ||
|align=center|24 | |align=center|24 | ||
|align=center| | |- | ||
|{{ | !2 | ||
|{{flag|BRA}} [[Lucas Esper Berthoud]] | |||
|align=center|22 | |||
|- | |||
!3 | |||
|{{flag|ESP}} [[Javier Dominguez]] | |||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!4 | |||
|{{ | |{{flag|GRC}} Makis Matsoukas | ||
| | |||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!5 | |||
|{{ | |{{flag|USA}} Michael Lagamba | ||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
| | |- | ||
|{{ | !6 | ||
|{{flag|USA}} [[Paul Rietzl]] | |||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!7 | |||
|{{ | |{{flag|SGP}} Tay Jun Hao | ||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
| | |- | ||
|{{ | !8 | ||
|{{flag|CAN}} [[Jon Stern]] | |||
|align=center|21 | |align=center|21 | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Day two== | ==Day two== | ||
The second Rivals draft followed the undefeated Moscato and Hall of Famer Rietzl, drafting Blue-White Ascend and Red-Black removal; unfortunately, like the Day 1 featured drafters, Rietzl went 0–3 and Moscato 1–2; the pod was won by Jon Stern, who thus took the overall lead in the tournament at 10–1. Following him was Pascal Vieren of Belgium, who trailed by one point due to two draws on Day 1, at 9–0–2. | The second Rivals draft followed the undefeated Moscato and Hall of Famer Rietzl, drafting Blue-White Ascend and Red-Black removal; unfortunately, like the Day 1 featured drafters, Rietzl went 0–3, and Moscato 1–2; the pod was won by Jon Stern, who thus took the overall lead in the tournament at 10–1. Following him was Pascal Vieren of Belgium, who trailed by one point due to two draws on Day 1, at 9–0–2. | ||
The cutoff metagame rewarded those who read the format shift accurately, with most aggro decks suffering while blue control (excluding Blue-White) flourished. Additionally, Valakut based strategies, non-Shadow midrange, and most combo fared poorly, due to increased nonbasic and graveyard hate. The first lock for the Top 8 was Pascal Vieren with Blue-Red Pyromancer in round 14, with an unusual 12–0–2 record that ultimately | The cutoff metagame rewarded those who read the format shift accurately, with most aggro decks suffering while blue control (excluding Blue-White) flourished. Additionally, Valakut-based strategies, non-Shadow midrange, and most combo decks fared poorly, due to increased nonbasic and graveyard hate. The first lock for the Top 8 was Pascal Vieren with Blue-Red Pyromancer in round 14, with an unusual 12–0–2 record that ultimately led to a 12–0–4 record and technically undefeated. [[Ken Yukuhiro]] piloting Black-Red Hollow One landed his fourth Top 8 in the same round. Round 15 lined up the next four players at 12–3 - [[Reid Duke]] on Abzan, [[Gerry Thompson]] on Mardu Pyromancer, [[Javier Dominguez]] on 5C Humans, and Jean-Emmanual Depraz on Traverse Shadow. [[Luis Salvatto]] on Lantern Control also landed on 12–3, but had the worst breakers and was paired down against [[Lucas Esper Berthoud]] at 11–3–1. Salvatto won his win-and-in, and [[Andrea Mengucci]] defeated Matis Matsoukas for the only 12–4 spot; [[Jon Finkel]] was edged out by 2.7% on tiebreakers and finished 9th. | ||
==Top 8== | ==Top 8== | ||
Line 119: | Line 119: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{PT Rivals of Ixalan|Decks}} | |||
| | |||
==Worlds Leaderboard== | ==Worlds Leaderboard== | ||
===Player of the Year=== | ===Player of the Year=== | ||
[[Seth Manfield]] had a massive 20-point lead coming into the event thanks to winning [[Pro Tour Ixalan|Pro Tour ''Ixalan'']] and then finishing in the top eight of three [[Grand Prix]] events. He did not make it to Day 2 of competition, and [[Reid Duke]], already in second | [[Seth Manfield]] had a massive 20-point lead coming into the event thanks to winning [[Pro Tour Ixalan|Pro Tour ''Ixalan'']] and then finishing in the top eight of three [[Grand Prix]] events. He did not make it to Day 2 of the competition, and [[Reid Duke]], already in second place before the event, made it to Sunday play. However, Manfield's lead was such that even this left him with a sizable 5-point lead in the race going into the latter half of the season. 9 points behind Duke was the winner of the Pro Tour, [[Luis Salvatto]], followed by John Rolf and [[Gerry Thompson]]. | ||
{|class="wikitable | {|class="wikitable" | ||
!Player | !Player | ||
!Pro Points | !Pro Points | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ | |{{flag|USA}} [[Seth Manfield]] | ||
|align=center|62 | |align=center|62 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ | |{{flag|USA}} [[Reid Duke]] | ||
|align=center|57 | |align=center|57 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ | |{{flag|ARG}} [[Luis Salvatto]] | ||
|align=center|48 | |align=center|48 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ | |{{flag|USA}} John Rolf | ||
|align=center|44 | |align=center|44 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ | |{{flag|USA}} [[Gerry Thompson]] | ||
|align=center|42 | |align=center|42 | ||
|} | |} | ||
===Pro Tour Team Series=== | ===Pro Tour Team Series=== | ||
After the Pro Tour, Ultimate Guard | After the Pro Tour, Ultimate Guard became a big winner of the event: coming into the event in fourth place, with [[Reid Duke]]'s Top 8 and one 12–4 (which is the maximum finish for non-Top 8 players in terms of Pro Points) finish, they become the mid-season leader of team series. Similarly, inaugural Team Series winners Musashi, despite a disappointing 15th-place start at [[Pro Tour Ixalan|Pro Tour ''Ixalan'']], made a big comeback with [[Ken Yukuhiro]]'s top 4, one 12–4, and three 10–6 finishes or better, and jumped to 2nd-place. Inaugural Team Series runners-up and previous leaders Genesis, despite having a decent outing with five players scoring a 9–7 record or better (the prerequisite for earning more than the minimum 3 Pro Points) in this pro tour, including one 12–4 and one 10–6, it was not good enough to keep the lead, and they slipped down to third place. Hareruya Latin, with the help of [[Luis Salvatto]]'s win, was in fourth place. Notably, these four teams were only separated by a 9-point margin. In fifth was Connected Company, which had two Pro Tour top 8s. | ||
===Draft Master=== | ===Draft Master=== | ||
Seven players went | Seven players went 6–0 in the Draft, most notably Elias Watsfeldt, who now had a perfect 12–0 record over two Pro Tours. Top eight members [[Andrea Mengucci]], Pascal Vieren, and Jean-Emmanual Depraz also went 6–0, and rounding out the rest were [[Jon Stern]], Mattia Zapparoli, and Elliot Boussaud. | ||
===Constructed Master=== | ===Constructed Master=== | ||
[[Gerry Thompson]] posted a near-perfect record of 9–0–1 with his Mardu Pyromancer deck; he was trailed by Jacob Nagro on Eldrazi Tron, [[Alex Majlaton]] on Blue-White Control, and [[Immanuel Gerschenson]] on Traverse Shadow, all at 9–1. At 16–4, Gerschenson tied with World Champion [[Brian Braun-Duin]] in second | [[Gerry Thompson]] posted a near-perfect record of 9–0–1 with his Mardu Pyromancer deck; he was trailed by Jacob Nagro on Eldrazi Tron, [[Alex Majlaton]] on Blue-White Control, and [[Immanuel Gerschenson]] on Traverse Shadow, all at 9–1. At 16–4, Gerschenson tied with World Champion [[Brian Braun-Duin]] in second place, but first place was John Rolf, whose intentional draw at [[Pro Tour Ixalan|Pro Tour ''Ixalan'']] put him in the lead in the Constructed Master race at 16–3–1. | ||
{{2017–18 PT Season}} | {{2017–18 PT Season}} | ||
[[Category:Pro | [[Category:Pro Tours|P107]] |
Latest revision as of 15:15, 25 April 2024
Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Date | 2–4 February 2018 | |||
Location | Bilbao, Spain | |||
Attendance | 465 | |||
Format | Modern and Booster draft | |||
Prize pool | $250,000 | |||
Winner | Luis Salvatto | |||
|
Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan was the second Pro Tour of the 2017–18 season. It took place on 2–4 February 2018 in Bilbao, Spain. It was the return of the Modern Pro Tour, the first of its kind since PT Oath of the Gatewatch in 2016. The event was won by Argentina's Luis Salvatto, whose Lantern Control deck took him to victory in the final against PT Amonkhet champion Gerry Thompson.
Format
Modern had not been a Pro Tour format for two years, but the Grand Prix events featuring the format were still hugely popular, and Modern events generally had the highest viewership, so it was brought back for the 2017–18 season. The banlist had been stable since the Eldrazi Winter, having only (re-)added Golgari Grave-Troll - which did not destroy Dredge as a deck - and Gitaxian Probe - which in particular weakened Infect and Death's Shadow decks. The biggest innovation since PT Oath of the Gatewatch was the development of the Death's Shadow strategies in early 2017, creating the newest midrange deck, with powerful threats and strong disruptive capabilities. A new player in the field was 4C or 5C Humans, using Unclaimed Territory and Kitesail Freebooter for near-perfect mana as well as combo disruption.
The previous Modern GP showed a metagame development from Death's Shadow domination into big-mana Tron and Scapeshift decks, whose gameplans are difficult for Death's Shadow decks to interact with.
Day one
The Rivals of Ixalan Booster draft followed World Championship finalists Seth Manfield and Owen Turtenwald, drafting Blue-Green Merfolk and Blue-Red, respectively. However, neither player fared well in their pod, with Seth taking one win and Owen taking none. Instead, the pod was won by the relatively unknown Colin Rountree, who drafted White-Blue. Other players who won their respective pods included Paul Rietzl, Raphaël Lévy, Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa, and Ben Stark.
The breakdown of the Modern format seemed fairly balanced, with the top represented deck of 5C Humans taking up only 9.8% of the metagame. With the format shifting to big mana decks, aggressive strategies such as Burn, Affinity, and Humans took the top tables, which left room for the control decks heavy in removal to take over. At the end of the day, Italian 2017 World Magic Cup competitor Adriano Moscato was the last undefeated player, wielding 5C Humans, with PT Aether Revolt champion Lucas Esper Berthoud barely behind at 7–0–1, also on 5C Humans.
The top eight players after day one:
Rank | Player | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Adriano Moscato | 24 |
2 | Lucas Esper Berthoud | 22 |
3 | Javier Dominguez | 21 |
4 | Makis Matsoukas | 21 |
5 | Michael Lagamba | 21 |
6 | Paul Rietzl | 21 |
7 | Tay Jun Hao | 21 |
8 | Jon Stern | 21 |
Day two
The second Rivals draft followed the undefeated Moscato and Hall of Famer Rietzl, drafting Blue-White Ascend and Red-Black removal; unfortunately, like the Day 1 featured drafters, Rietzl went 0–3, and Moscato 1–2; the pod was won by Jon Stern, who thus took the overall lead in the tournament at 10–1. Following him was Pascal Vieren of Belgium, who trailed by one point due to two draws on Day 1, at 9–0–2.
The cutoff metagame rewarded those who read the format shift accurately, with most aggro decks suffering while blue control (excluding Blue-White) flourished. Additionally, Valakut-based strategies, non-Shadow midrange, and most combo decks fared poorly, due to increased nonbasic and graveyard hate. The first lock for the Top 8 was Pascal Vieren with Blue-Red Pyromancer in round 14, with an unusual 12–0–2 record that ultimately led to a 12–0–4 record and technically undefeated. Ken Yukuhiro piloting Black-Red Hollow One landed his fourth Top 8 in the same round. Round 15 lined up the next four players at 12–3 - Reid Duke on Abzan, Gerry Thompson on Mardu Pyromancer, Javier Dominguez on 5C Humans, and Jean-Emmanual Depraz on Traverse Shadow. Luis Salvatto on Lantern Control also landed on 12–3, but had the worst breakers and was paired down against Lucas Esper Berthoud at 11–3–1. Salvatto won his win-and-in, and Andrea Mengucci defeated Matis Matsoukas for the only 12–4 spot; Jon Finkel was edged out by 2.7% on tiebreakers and finished 9th.
Top 8
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||||
1 | Pascal Vieren | 3 | |||||||||||
8 | Andrea Mengucci | 0 | |||||||||||
1 | Pascal Vieren | 2 | |||||||||||
4 | Gerry Thompson | 3 | |||||||||||
4 | Gerry Thompson | 3 | |||||||||||
5 | Javier Dominguez | 1 | |||||||||||
3 | Gerry Thompson | 0 | |||||||||||
2 | Luis Salvatto | 3 | |||||||||||
3 | Ken Yukuhiro | 3 | |||||||||||
6 | Reid Duke | 2 | |||||||||||
3 | Ken Yukuhiro | 2 | |||||||||||
2 | Luis Salvatto | 3 | |||||||||||
2 | Luis Salvatto | 3 | |||||||||||
7 | Jean-Emmanuel Depraz | 2 |
Place | Player | Prize | Pro Points | Decks | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Luis Salvatto | $50,000 | 30 | Lantern Control | Second Pro Tour Top 8 First Argentinean to win a Pro Tour |
2 | Gerry Thompson | $20,000 | 28 | Mardu Pyromancer | Third Pro Tour Top 8 |
3 | Pascal Vieren | $15,000 | 24 | UR Pyromancer | |
4 | Ken Yukuhiro | $12,500 | 22 | BR Hollow One | Fourth Pro Tour Top 8 |
5 | Javier Dominguez | $10,000 | 20 | 5C Humans | |
6 | Reid Duke | $9,000 | 18 | Abzan Midrange | Third Pro Tour Top 8 |
7 | Jean-Emmanuel Depraz | $7,500 | 17 | Traverse Shadow | |
8 | Andrea Mengucci | $6,000 | 16 | 5C Humans | Third Pro Tour Top 8 |
Worlds Leaderboard
Player of the Year
Seth Manfield had a massive 20-point lead coming into the event thanks to winning Pro Tour Ixalan and then finishing in the top eight of three Grand Prix events. He did not make it to Day 2 of the competition, and Reid Duke, already in second place before the event, made it to Sunday play. However, Manfield's lead was such that even this left him with a sizable 5-point lead in the race going into the latter half of the season. 9 points behind Duke was the winner of the Pro Tour, Luis Salvatto, followed by John Rolf and Gerry Thompson.
Player | Pro Points |
---|---|
Seth Manfield | 62 |
Reid Duke | 57 |
Luis Salvatto | 48 |
John Rolf | 44 |
Gerry Thompson | 42 |
Pro Tour Team Series
After the Pro Tour, Ultimate Guard became a big winner of the event: coming into the event in fourth place, with Reid Duke's Top 8 and one 12–4 (which is the maximum finish for non-Top 8 players in terms of Pro Points) finish, they become the mid-season leader of team series. Similarly, inaugural Team Series winners Musashi, despite a disappointing 15th-place start at Pro Tour Ixalan, made a big comeback with Ken Yukuhiro's top 4, one 12–4, and three 10–6 finishes or better, and jumped to 2nd-place. Inaugural Team Series runners-up and previous leaders Genesis, despite having a decent outing with five players scoring a 9–7 record or better (the prerequisite for earning more than the minimum 3 Pro Points) in this pro tour, including one 12–4 and one 10–6, it was not good enough to keep the lead, and they slipped down to third place. Hareruya Latin, with the help of Luis Salvatto's win, was in fourth place. Notably, these four teams were only separated by a 9-point margin. In fifth was Connected Company, which had two Pro Tour top 8s.
Draft Master
Seven players went 6–0 in the Draft, most notably Elias Watsfeldt, who now had a perfect 12–0 record over two Pro Tours. Top eight members Andrea Mengucci, Pascal Vieren, and Jean-Emmanual Depraz also went 6–0, and rounding out the rest were Jon Stern, Mattia Zapparoli, and Elliot Boussaud.
Constructed Master
Gerry Thompson posted a near-perfect record of 9–0–1 with his Mardu Pyromancer deck; he was trailed by Jacob Nagro on Eldrazi Tron, Alex Majlaton on Blue-White Control, and Immanuel Gerschenson on Traverse Shadow, all at 9–1. At 16–4, Gerschenson tied with World Champion Brian Braun-Duin in second place, but first place was John Rolf, whose intentional draw at Pro Tour Ixalan put him in the lead in the Constructed Master race at 16–3–1.