Pro Tour Guilds of Ravnica: Difference between revisions

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Notably, all the decks chosen were part of the Jeskai color trio; despite the strength of the Golgari deck, the unsideboarded games meant the midrange decks are unfavored.  
Notably, all the decks chosen were part of the Jeskai color trio; despite the strength of the Golgari deck, the unsideboarded games meant the midrange decks are unfavored. For the slower decks, Salvatto chose the anti-creature Jeskai control deck, while Manfield chose the combo-esque Izzet Phoenix deck.
 
Both players opened with the mono-Blue tempo deck, which benefited from the mulligan rules allowing players to search for <c>Curious Obsession</c>. Seth Manfield took the first game in the mirror, and Salvatto attempted to run back the blue deck on the play, which Manfield met with one of Blue's worse matchups in mono-Red. However, the curve-topping <c>Experimental Frenzy</c> failed to deliver a stream of card advantage, with Salvatto taking the second game with two hits of a <c>Tempest Djinn</c>.
 
Both players swapped out for the third game, with Salvatto's Deafening Clarion in Jeskai Control devastating the Boros Weenie deck. Manfield hit another string of bad luck with his Izzet Phoenix deck, hitting 10 of 19 lands, but took the second win thanks to <c>Heroic Reinforcements</c>. In the final game, Manfield's removal-heavy Red draw, normally good against Mono-White, was overpowered by double <c>History of Benalia</c>.
 
== Standard ==
 
With Kaladesh and the Gods of Amonkhet rotating, many players expressed over the advent of a new format. The spectre of <c>Teferi, Hero of Dominaria</c> loomed over Standard, but the lack of <c>Hallowed Fountain</c> caused <c>Settle the Wreckage</c> and <c>Cleansing Nova</c> to be inconsistent and resulted in different color bases. Mono-Red powered by <c>Risk Factor</c> and <c>Experimental Frenzy</c> were powerful, but having lost <c>Scrapheap Scrounger</c> and three powerful top-end cards, the deck was combatable with conventional removal and minor lifegain, most notably <c>Wildgrowth Walker</c>.
 
Golgari Midrange was pinned as one of the more powerful new decks, but the GPs at Lille and New Jersey demonstrated that if the field wanted to fight it, it could - Jeskai Control, Izzet Phoenix, Mono-Blue Tempo and aggressive white decks with <c>Tocatli Honor Guard</c> were favored against Golgari, as the deck began gearing up for the mirror. As such, the Standard metagame was expected to be very much about who correctly predicts the moving target coming in. Other decks played a smaller part in the early weeks included Blue-Black control with Teferi, Grixis decks focused on <c>Nicol Bolas, The Ravager</c>, Selesnya token strategies, and rotation holdover Steel Leaf Stompy.


{{2018–19 PT Season}}
{{2018–19 PT Season}}
[[Category:Pro Tours|P110]]
[[Category:Pro Tours|P110]]

Revision as of 06:08, 9 November 2018

Pro Tour Guilds of Ravnica
Date November 9–11
Location Template:Flagicon Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Format Standard and Booster draft
Prize pool $250,000
Previous Pro Tour:
25th Anniversary
Next Pro Tour:
''Pro Tour Cleveland 2019''

Pro Tour Guilds of Ravnica is the first Pro Tour of the 2018–19 season. It will take place on November 9–11 in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It is the last Pro Tour to be tied to a specific set release.

2017-18 Player of the Year Playoff

Before Day 1 of the main event, a best of seven games playoff is held between Seth Manfield and Luis Salvatto, to decide the 2017-18 season's Player of the Year title: Both players tied 81 points in last season.

The format is modified format based on Standard. Both players has to build 4 Standard decks without sideboard, which their four decks must not include more than eight copies of any given card (other than basic land). Before each game starts, both players choose one of the available decks to play against each other. They can take a free mulligan in each game. Whenever a player wins a game, the deck that the winning player using would be unavailable in the rest of the match. The player who win with all four decks wins the playoff.

Player Matchups
Template:Flagicon Seth Manfield Mono-Blue Tempo Mono-Red Aggro Boros Weenie Izzet Drakes Boros Weenie Mono-Red Aggro
Template:Flagicon Luis Salvatto Mono-Blue Tempo Mono-Blue Tempo Jeskai Control Mono-Red Aggro White Weenie White Weenie

Notably, all the decks chosen were part of the Jeskai color trio; despite the strength of the Golgari deck, the unsideboarded games meant the midrange decks are unfavored. For the slower decks, Salvatto chose the anti-creature Jeskai control deck, while Manfield chose the combo-esque Izzet Phoenix deck.

Both players opened with the mono-Blue tempo deck, which benefited from the mulligan rules allowing players to search for Curious Obsession. Seth Manfield took the first game in the mirror, and Salvatto attempted to run back the blue deck on the play, which Manfield met with one of Blue's worse matchups in mono-Red. However, the curve-topping Experimental Frenzy failed to deliver a stream of card advantage, with Salvatto taking the second game with two hits of a Tempest Djinn.

Both players swapped out for the third game, with Salvatto's Deafening Clarion in Jeskai Control devastating the Boros Weenie deck. Manfield hit another string of bad luck with his Izzet Phoenix deck, hitting 10 of 19 lands, but took the second win thanks to Heroic Reinforcements. In the final game, Manfield's removal-heavy Red draw, normally good against Mono-White, was overpowered by double History of Benalia.

Standard

With Kaladesh and the Gods of Amonkhet rotating, many players expressed over the advent of a new format. The spectre of Teferi, Hero of Dominaria loomed over Standard, but the lack of Hallowed Fountain caused Settle the Wreckage and Cleansing Nova to be inconsistent and resulted in different color bases. Mono-Red powered by Risk Factor and Experimental Frenzy were powerful, but having lost Scrapheap Scrounger and three powerful top-end cards, the deck was combatable with conventional removal and minor lifegain, most notably Wildgrowth Walker.

Golgari Midrange was pinned as one of the more powerful new decks, but the GPs at Lille and New Jersey demonstrated that if the field wanted to fight it, it could - Jeskai Control, Izzet Phoenix, Mono-Blue Tempo and aggressive white decks with Tocatli Honor Guard were favored against Golgari, as the deck began gearing up for the mirror. As such, the Standard metagame was expected to be very much about who correctly predicts the moving target coming in. Other decks played a smaller part in the early weeks included Blue-Black control with Teferi, Grixis decks focused on Nicol Bolas, The Ravager, Selesnya token strategies, and rotation holdover Steel Leaf Stompy.