Pro Tour Amonkhet

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Template:Infobox PT

Pro Tour Amonkhet is the third Pro Tour of the 2016–17 season. It takes place on 12–14 May 2017 in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.

Structure and payout changes

The top 8 playoff system was reverted to traditional single-elimination starting with Pro Tour Amonkhet, as WotC deemed the bracket format used in Pro Tour Kaladesh and Pro Tour Aether Revolt to have little effect on reducing intentional draws among top players. However, as a purpose to favor high finishes in the Swiss portion of the event, the money and Pro Point payouts were slightly adjusted; players finishing in third- through eight-place receive payouts based on relative finish in the Swiss. Additionally, players who finished with 31-32 match points receive one fewer Pro Point than under the previous system.[1]

Format

The Standard format prior to the release of Amonkhet was dominated by Mardu Vehicles and Felidar Guardian/Saheeli Rai combo decks, and many commented that the Felidar Guardian decks in particular stifled innovation in what was considered one of the least diverse Standard formats of all time.[2] Felidar Guardian was not banned on the March 14th B&R update, but when Amonkhet did not prove to have the tools to fight the combo, it was widely expected to be banned on April 24th, prior to the Pro Tour. However, no changes were announced to the Standard format; instead, it was stated that WotC would re-evaluate the situation a few weeks after the Pro Tour.[3] But two days later, citing a stale Magic Online Standard format, WotC posted an addendum to the B&R announcement with the immediate banning of Felidar Guardian.[4]

Prior to the Pro Tour, there was a Star City Games Open event in Atlanta featuring Standard with Felidar Guardian banned. The top eight sported five Mardu Vehicles decks, not unlike the decks that were used to great success at Pro Tour Aether Revolt.[5] This led to the question of whether Mardu could be dethroned in Standard.[6]

Day one

The event kicked off with a triple Amonkhet Booster draft, with Martin Jůza, hot off of a top eight at Pro Tour Aether Revolt and the leader in the Draft Master race for the 2017 World Championship, being covered. Jůza drafted a Blue-Red spells deck that he described as "the best deck he ever had", though he still fell to Gabriel Nassif in the second round. Jůza finished 2–1, while Nassif got the 3–0 with his Red-Green deck. Other famous players to 3–0 their draft included Eric Froehlich, Shōta Yasooka, Owen Turtenwald, Yuuya Watanabe, Jelger Wiegersma, and Seth Manfield.

In Standard, by far the three most popular decks were Mardu Vehicles, Temur Aetherworks, and Mono-Black Zombie, with no other decks making up more than 5% of the field. The largest, unsurprisingly, was Mardu Vehicles, being favored by 26% of the players. Hot on its heels at 20% was Temur Aetherworks, built around the namesake Aetherworks Marvel, hoping to use the powerful artifact to play an early Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger. Mono-Black Zombies was in third, occupying 17% of the metagame. Several new cards from Amonkhet with significant Zombie synergies allowed the deck to rise from obscurity to competitive, with the most important cards being Lord of the Accursed and Dread Wanderer. At the end of the day, there were two remaining undefeated players: Team Opportunity's Pierre Dagen (playing Green-Black Energy) and Chris Fennell (Black-White Zombies) of team Lingering Souls. In terms of team standings, Genesis was the best performing team on day one, with Martin Müller setting the pace at 7–1, and four additional players on 6–2 records. Co-leader in the team standings from Pro Tour Aether Revolt, Musashi, was the second most successful team.

The top eight players after day one:

Rank Player Points Rank Player Points
1 Template:Flagicon FRA Pierre Dagen 24 5 Template:Flagicon USA Christian Calcano 21
2 Template:Flagicon USA Chris Fennell 24 6 Template:Flagicon JPN Shōta Yasooka 21
3 Template:Flagicon JPN Kazuaki Fujimura 21 7 Template:Flagicon USA Eric Froehlich 21
4 Template:Flagicon AUS Oliver Oks 21 8 Template:Flagicon USA Gerard Fabiano 21

Day two

For the second Amonkhet Booster draft, coverage followed the drafts of the two undefeated players, Chris Fennell and Pierre Dagen. Fennell had been an outspoken dissenter against the conventional wisdom that the format was very fast and all about Exert creatures, and drafted a fairly slow Blue-Green deck that took him to a 2–1 record, losing in the last round of draft to Eric Froehlich. Dagen, on the other hand, struggled in the first pack to find his colors; he settled into White-Blue, but could only post a 1–2 finish with the deck. On pod two, also on 7–1 going into the draft, Denmark's Martin Müller pulled off the 3–0 to advance to 10–1 and in joint lead with Fennell and Froehlich.

The final standings and Top 8 competitors:

Rank Player Points Rank Player Points
1 Template:Flagicon USA Chris Fennell 42 5 Template:Flagicon DNK Martin Muller 37
2 Template:Flagicon JPN Ken Yukuhiro 39 6 Template:Flagicon USA Gerry Thompson 37
3 Template:Flagicon DEU Marc Tobiasch 38 7 Template:Flagicon USA Eric Froehlich 36
4 Template:Flagicon USA Christian Calcano 38 8 Template:Flagicon JPN Yuuya Watanabe 36

External links

References