Continental Championship

From MTG Wiki
(Redirected from Continental Championships)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Continental Championships were annual events held in three different geographical regions: Europe, Latin America, and Asia Pacfic. It debuted in 1997 with the Asia Pacific Championship; the European Championship was introduced a year later, and finally the Latin American Championship debuted in 2000. Players would qualify by finishing in the top eight of their National Championships, or by having enough Pro Points or a high DCI rating. The events featured Standard and Booster draft, and top finishing players would win money, and the top eight earned invitations to the corresponding World Championships, but the event did not award Pro Points. The series was discontinued after the 2003 European Championship.

European Championships

Six European Championship events were held; of these, four were won by Norwegians, earning it the nickname "the Norwegian Invitational".[1] The most successful player was Nicolai Herzog, who won the event in 1999 and 2003.

1998 European Championship

9–11 July 1998.

Place Player
1 NOR flag Sturla Bingen
2 CZE flag Jakub Slemr
3 NOR flag Jan Pieter Groenhof
4 DNK flag Jakob Steinaa
5 GB-ENG flag Tony Dobson
6 NLD flag Tom van de Logt
7 FIN flag Arho Toikka
8 HUN flag Gabor Papp

1999 European Championship

10–12 July 1999 in Berlin, Germany.

Place Player Prize
1 NOR flag Nicolai Herzog $11,500
2 DEU flag Dirk Baberowski $7,000
3 FRA flag Pierre Malherbaud $4,600
4 FRA flag Raphaël Lévy $3,700
5 SWE flag Mattias Jorstedt $3,035
6 FIN flag Tommi Hovi $2,555
7 FIN flag Arto Hiltunen $2,225
8 DEU flag Holger Meinecke $2,000

2000 European Championship

14–16 July 2000 in Paris, France.

Place Player Prize
1 NLD flag Noah Boeken $11,500
2 FRA flag Raphaël Lévy $7,000
3 FRA flag Loic Dobrigna $4,600
4 SWE flag Rickard Österberg $3,700
5 NLD flag Joost Winter $3,035
6 DEU flag Wolfgang Eder $2,555
7 SWE flag Johan Franzén $2,225
8 BEL flag Gert Coeckelbergh $2,000

2001 European Championship

29 June–1 July 2001 in Milan, Italy.

Place Player Prize
1 NOR flag Eivind Nitter $15,000
2 CHE flag Dave Montreuil $7,500
3 FIN flag Tomi Walamies $5,500
4 DEU flag Daniel Zink $4,500
5 SWE flag Jens Thorén $3,000
6 GB-ENG flag John Ormerod $2,500
7 DEU flag Wolfgang Eder $2,000
8 NOR flag Sturla Bingen $1,500

2002 European Championship

28–30 June 2002 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Place Player Prize
1 DEU flag David Brucker $15,000
2 FRA flag Christophe Haim $7,500
3 NLD flag Victor van den Broek $5,500
4 ITA flag Marco Lombardi $4,500
5 FRA flag Amiel Tenenbaum $3,000
6 SWE flag Anton Jonsson $2,500
7 DEU flag Roland Bode $2,000
8 DNK flag Svend Geertsen $1,500

2003 European Championship

4–6 July 2003 in London, Great Britain.

Place Player Prize
1 NOR flag Nicolai Herzog $15,000
2 FRA flag Pierre Malherbaud $7,500
3 FIN flag Jussi Salovaara $5,500
4 NOR flag Sigurd Eskeland $4,500
5 FRA flag Gabriel Nassif $3,000
6 GB-ENG flag Stuart Wright $2,500
7 FRA flag Thomas Shaw $2,000
8 SVN flag Borut Todorovic $1,500

Asia Pacific Championships

Five Asia Pacific Championships were held from 1997 to 2001, after which the event was discontinued. Australia's Nathan Russell won the first championship; the next four were won by Japanese players: Satoshi Nakamura in 1998, Masaya Mori in both 1999 and 2000, and finally Jin Okamoto in 2001. Okamoto's win at the last Asia Pacific Championship earned him the nickname "The Last Emperor".[2]

1997 Asia Pacific Championship

14–16 February 1997 in Hong Kong. Held concurrently with the 1997 Magic Invitational.

Place Player
1 AUS flag Nathan Russell
2 JPN flag Toshiki Tsukamoto
3 AUS flag Tom Chanpheng
4 JPN flag Ryuji Ohashi
5 KOR flag Joo-Nyeon Kim
6 AUS flag Early Nguyen
7 AUS flag Rod Ho
8 PHL flag Raffy Lirag

1998 Asia Pacific Championship

26–27 July 1998 in Tokyo, Japan.

Place Player
1 JPN flag Satoshi Nakamura
2 JPN flag Sasanuma Kiyoshi
3 JPN flag Itaru Ishida
4 KOR flag Joo-Nyeon Kim
5 JPN flag Itadani Eisaku
6 SGP flag Sam Lau
7 JPN flag Goro Matsuo
8 TWN flag Autrijus Tang

1999 Asia Pacific Championship

2–4 July 1999 in Singapore.

Place Player Prize
1 JPN flag Masaya Mori $11,500
2 JPN flag Osamu Fujita $7,000
3 JPN flag Tsuyoshi Fujita $4,600
4 AUS flag Michael Doecke $3,700
5 JPN flag Masayuki Higashino $3,035
6 JPN flag Reiji Ando $2,555
7 JPN flag Masami Ibamoto $2,225
8 JPN flag Kazuyuki Momose $2,000

2000 Asia Pacific Championship

7–9 July 2000 in Hong Kong.

Place Player Prize
1 JPN flag Masaya Mori $11,500
2 JPN flag Hiroto Watanabe $7,000
3 JPN flag Ittoku Tanaka $4,600
4 AUS flag Sam Ward $3,700
5 HKG flag Chi Fai Teddy Ng $3,035
6 JPN flag Koichiro Maki $2,555
7 TWN flag Chen Yu Weng $2,225
8 JPN flag Satoshi Nakamura $2,000

2001 Asia Pacific Championship

22–24 June 2001 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Place Player Prize
1 JPN flag Jin Okamoto $15,000
2 JPN flag Jun Nobushita $7,500
3 JPN flag Katsuhiro Mori $5,500
4 SGP flag Royce Chai $4,500
5 SGP flag Sam Lau $3,000
6 MYS flag Albertus Law $2,500
7 TWN flag Tobey Tamber $2,000
8 JPN flag Yujian Zhou $1,500

Latin American Championships

Only two Latin American Championships were held, in 2000 and 2001.

2000 Latin American Championship

23–25 June 2000 in Santiago, Chile.

Place Player Prize
1 MEX flag Gustavo Chapela Gaxiola $11,500
2 CHL flag Rafael Le Saux $7,000
3 MEX flag Gerardo Godinez Estrada $4,600
4 BRA flag Carlos Romão $3,700
5 MEX flag Francisco Garcia Barbosa $3,035
6 BRA flag Alex Sousa $2,555
7 BRA flag Eduardo Simao Teixeira $2,225
8 BRA flag Thomas Felsberg $2,000

2001 Latin American Championship

29 June–1 July 2001 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Place Player Prize
1 URY flag Scott Richards $15,000
2 ARG flag Diego Ostrovich $7,500
3 BRA flag Raphael Garcia $5,500
4 BRA flag Victor Galimbertti $4,500
5 BRA flag Christiano Pereira $3,000
6 BRA flag Eduardo Sella $2,500
7 ARG flag Alejandro del Gerbo Actis $2,000
8 BRA flag Julio Silva Maciel $1,500

References

  1. LIVE COVERAGE OF 2003 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-11.
  2. Toby Wachter. "Round 5: Jin Okamoto vs. Kenji Sato". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-11.