Pro Tour Dominaria
Pro Tour Dominaria was the third Pro Tour of the 2017–18 season. It took place on 1–3 June 2018 in Richmond, Virginia, United States. The event was dominated by red-based aggressive decks featuring Goblin Chainwhirler, with seven of the top 8 decks featuring four copies of the card. The winner was American Wyatt Darby playing Mono-Red, who defeated Goncalo Pinto of Portugal 3-2 in the final. Darby's win came in just his second Pro Tour start; this made him the first player to win one of his first two Pro Tours since Jacob van Lunen and Chris Lachmann won Pro Tour San Diego in 2007.
Format
Having taken a break from Standard during Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan, the post-banning metagame was said to be reasonably open and balanced; Rivals of Ixalan had a minor impact, but Teferi, Hero of Dominaria, the enemy-colour checklands, and the triple-colour cycle have shown to be powerful influences on the metagame. Prior to the set release, Hazoret, The Fervent and The Scarab God were heavily dominant in the early and late game respectively, but Teferi served as a superior control finisher and Seal Awayand increased reliance on Rekindling Phoenixmade the hellbent restriction impactical. Like PT Ixalan, the event took place a month after release, allowing the format to stabilise.
Day one
The Dominaria Booster draft followed Luis Scott-Vargas and Jon Finkel, drafting Blue-White and Blue-Red, respectively. Finkel's draft was exceptional with colourless bombs Karn, Scion of Urza and Helm of the Host, which lead him to a 3-0 finish for the pod; Scott-Vargas stumbled in his draft, and despite a powerful pack 3, the deck only went 1-2.
The two major archetypes in the Pro tour were White-Blue control with only Teferi as a win condition, and the next evolution of the perennial Standard archetype of Vehicles, this time in effectively mono-Red with Black mana for Unlicensed Disintegration and Scrapheap Scrounger, featuring newcomer Goblin Chainwhirler. The Chainwhirler was the most warping of the triple-colour cycle, punishing anything reliant on one-toughness creatures, and capable of crewing Heart of Kiran. Lower ranked decks include mono-Green with Steel Leaf Champion, Black-Green Winding Constrictor, classic mono-Red, and assorted History of Benalia decks in Blue or Black. A rogue choice made by team ChannelFireball and related teammates was dubbed Blue-Green Karn using Scrap Trawler and Walking Ballista for value, but the main team had a terrible Day 1 for an overall 5 of 11 player conversion rate.
The two undefeated players were PT champion Lucas Esper Berthoud on Black-Green Constrictor and Ernest Lim on White-Blue control.
The top eight players after day one:
Rank | Player | Points | Rank | Player | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Template:Flagicon BRA Lucas Esper Berthoud | 24 | 5 | Template:Flagicon USA Jon Finkel | 21 |
2 | Template:Flagicon SGP Ernest Lim | 24 | 6 | Template:Flagicon USA Collin Rountree | 21 |
3 | Template:Flagicon JPN Atsuki Kihara | 21 | 7 | Template:Flagicon IDN Christian Wijaya | 21 |
4 | Template:Flagicon ITA Andrea Mengucci | 21 | 8 | Template:Flagicon NLD Thomas Hendriks | 21 |
Day two
Berthoud stumbled out of the gate, finishing the second draft 1-2. After going 1-4 in Standard, he would ultimately finish in 53rd place. Ernest Lim posted a solid 2-1 finish in the second draft of the tournament, putting himself in prime position for a top 8 finish at 10-1. Joining Lim at the top of the standings was Morgan McLaughlin of Canada, piloting a White/Black Vehicles deck similar to the one he used to win GP Toronto two weeks prior. Heading out of the final draft, many notable players were in prime position to make the top 8, with Berthoud, Andrea Mengucci, Jon Finkel, Thomas Hendriks, Gregory Orange, Owen Turtenwald, Brad Nelson, and Luis Salvatto all sitting at 9-2 heading into the final five rounds.
The first two players to lock up their place on Sunday were Thomas Hendriks and Hall of Famer Owen Turtenwald; both would eventally finish 12-2-2 with two intentional draws in the final two rounds. The top 8 looked to be a relatively clean cut; however, Kevin Jones and Marcio Carvalho received an unintentional draw in round 15, forcing both of them to play a win-and-in in the final round and giving players like Mengucci and McLaughlin an outside shot at top 8 if Carvalho lost his match against Christian Hauck. Ultimately, Jones lost to Kazuyuki Takimura and Carvalho won his match, leaving McLaughlin in a heartbreaking ninth place after an 11-1 start.
Reid Duke's fifteenth-place finish was notable: after starting the tournament 1-4, Duke needed to win three straight rounds just to make day 2. Duke would eventually win a staggering eleven straight rounds to finish 12-4; even more impressively, seven of the players he defeated during this stretch (Samuel Ihlenfeldt, Yoshihiko Ikawa, Makihito Mihara, Brian Braun-Duin, Piotr Glogowski, Remi Fortier, and Ken Yukuhiro) had previously made the final day of either a Pro Tour or the World Championship. Fortier, the winner of Pro Tour Valencia, was returning to the Pro Tour after a yearlong absence; he finished 11-5 and by doing so qualified for Pro Tour 25th Anniversary in Minneapolis.
Top 8
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||||
1 | Kazuyuki Takimura | 2 | |||||||||||
8 | Marcio Carvalho | 3 | |||||||||||
8 | Marcio Carvalho | 1 | |||||||||||
5 | Goncalo Pinto | 3 | |||||||||||
4 | Ernest Lim | 0 | |||||||||||
5 | Goncalo Pinto | 3 | |||||||||||
5 | Goncalo Pinto | 2 | |||||||||||
6 | Wyatt Darby | 3 | |||||||||||
3 | Thomas Hendriks | 1 | |||||||||||
6 | Wyatt Darby | 3 | |||||||||||
6 | Wyatt Darby | 3 | |||||||||||
2 | Owen Turtenwald | 1 | |||||||||||
2 | Owen Turtenwald | 3 | |||||||||||
7 | Manuel Lenz | 0 |
Place | Player | Deck | Prize | Pro Points | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Template:Flagicon USA Wyatt Darby | Mono-Red Aggro | $50,000 | 30 | |
2 | Template:Flagicon PRT Goncalo Pinto | Black-Red Aggro | $20,000 | 28 | |
3 | Template:Flagicon USA Owen Turtenwald | Red-Black Aggro | $15,000 | 24 | Fifth Pro Tour Top 8 |
4 | Template:Flagicon PRT Marcio Carvalho | Red-Black Aggro | $12,500 | 22 | Fourth Pro Tour Top 8 |
5 | Template:Flagicon JPN Kazuyuki Takimura | Red-Black Midrange | $10,000 | 20 | Second Pro Tour Top 8 |
6 | Template:Flagicon NLD Thomas Hendriks | Red-Black Aggro | $9,000 | 18 | Second Pro Tour Top 8 |
7 | Template:Flagicon SGP Ernest Lim | Esper Control | $7,500 | 17 | |
8 | Template:Flagicon AUT Manual Lenz | Mono-Red Aggro | $6,000 | 16 |
Worlds Leaderboard
Player of the Year
Seth Manfield hit his GP cap in the season, resulting in a small three-point gain since Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan, and Reid Duke nearly matched with another two, resulting a six-point gap from 59 to 65. Luis Salvatto also closed the gap with two good GP performances, putting him at 56. All three were in close contention up to the middle of the Standard portion, where Duke pulled ahead by two wins and Salvatoo and Manfield remained at 10-6, putting Duke cleanly in the lead. Highest ranked Top 8 competitor Owen Turtenwald reached 63 points.
Player | Pro Points |
---|---|
Template:Flagicon USA Reid Duke | 74 |
Template:Flagicon USA Seth Manfield | 71 |
Template:Flagicon USA Owen Turtenwald | 63 |
Template:Flagicon ARG Luis Salvatto | 61 |
Template:Flagicon USA John Rolf | 56 |
Pro Tour Team Series
As both finalists in this event did not belong to any team (actually, first ever independent Pro Tour finalists since introduction of Team Series), the two teams that have a Top 4 finish would be big winners after this event: Ultimate Guard Pro Team ,with the help of Owen Turtenwald's Top 4 appearance, extended their lead from 3 points to 28 points, making them in a prime position to the 2018 Team Series Final. Hareruya Latin, with the help of Marcio Carvalho's Top 4, moved up from fourth-place to second place with 9 point (and a PT win tiebreaker) advantage. Connected Company, Musashi, Genesis still remained in Top 5, separated with only a combined-9 point margin between these teams.
The Top 16 teams' member after this Pro Tour earned Team Qualification in Pro Tour 25th Anniversary (providing those teams do not disband between both events), the remaining 11 teams are Ultra PRO, ChannelFireball, MetaGame Gurus Sun, Revelation, MetaGame Gurus Moon, EUreka, Massdrop West, Kusemono, Cardmarket, Face to Face Games, and Final Last Samurai.
Draft Master
Watsfeldt broke his streak for draft, but with a 2-1 finish bought him breathing room over the first draft, while his immediate rivals Alexander Hayne and Craig Wescoe failed to Day 2. With his only rival for the title Andrea Mengucci losing his first draft round, Watsfeldt guaranteed his place at Worlds with a total 16-1-1 record.
Event winner Wyatt Darby was among the 6-0 drafters, alongside Corey Burkhart, Timothy Wu, Ondrej Strasky, Niels Noorlander, Brandon Ayers, Kevin Jones and Tomoya Tsubouchi.
Constructed Master
John Rolf held a tenuous one-point lead over PT Rivals of Ixalan, but stumbled over the constructed rounds with 3-2 on day 1, opening him to challengers - a 9-1 streak by Matt Severa closed the gap and won Constructed master in the final round. His was the only 9-1 posting on the day; four players had one loss but multiple draws, all from the Top 8; Marcio Carvalho, Owen Turtenwald, Manuel Lenz, and Goncalo Pinto. All five were piloting Red-Black Chainwhirler Aggro decks, though Manuel Lenz had no Unlicensed Disintegration maindeck.