Innistrad Standard Throwback Standard Gauntlet League
Innistrad Standard Throwback Standard Gauntlet League | |||||
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Magic: The Gathering Online | |||||
Event Details | |||||
Event date | November 1 to 8, 2017 | ||||
Format | Standard | ||||
Themes and mechanics | Historical decks from Innistrad block Standards. | ||||
Number of decks | 10 decks | ||||
Deck size | 75 cards | ||||
Magic Online Gauntlets | |||||
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Digital preconstructed decks | |||||
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The Innistrad Standard Throwback Standard Gauntlet League was a phantom preconstructed event held on Magic Online. It included old Standard decks from the period of September 2011 through August 2013: the two years when Innistrad was legal. The event was held between November 1 and 8, 2017[1].
Aristocrats
A deck designed by Sam Black and played to a Pro Tour victory by Tom Martell.
“ | This is a quintessential Sam Black deck, and Tom Martell benefited from his design wizardry to win Pro Tour Gatecrash. I couldn’t hope to tell you all the intricacies of the ways these creatures interact in a single paragraph, so just accept that you will miss something every time you play, and you will nonetheless enjoy all the stuff you do figure out.[1] | ” |
Bant Auras
A deck with an Aura "Voltron" strategy.
“ | While there are no actual Bogles in this list, the strategy will look familiar to anyone who enjoys tormenting their opponents by putting piles of enchantments onto those small hexproof creatures. Two copies of this deck met in the finals of Grand Prix Atlantic City in January 2013, with Jon Stern emerging victorious over Josh Utter-Leyton.[1] | ” |
Delver
A tempo deck as played by Yuuya Watanabe.
“ | It may not have won a Pro Tour, but the most dominant deck of 2012 was without a doubt Delver. There were seven Standard-format Grand Prix held in the first half of the year, and Delver decks won fully six of them! Yuuya Watanabe won two of those, so it is his list, with six hexproof creatures and a trio of Runechanter's Pikes, that we're using here.[1] | ” |
Delver had a positive record in the Gauntlet, but it was still only the 5th-best-performing deck.[2]
Esper Control
A control deck.
“ | The control decks at that Pro Tour took a couple of different forms, but the one that had the most staying power was an Esper build with very few creatures and a game plan built around trading answers for threats one-for-one until it could pull ahead with Sphinx's Revelation. This one is for all of you who have been waiting patiently for Gauntlet-time to advance far enough to play with Sphinx’s Rev again.[1] | ” |
Jund
A midrange deck.
“ | Cascade might have rotated out of Standard by this point, but that didn’t stop people from playing grindy black-green decks. No one did better with this archetype than Reid Duke, who used it to win Grand Prix Miami before piloting it to an impressive second-place finish at Worlds 2013.[1] | ” |
Junk Reanimator
A (or "Junk") Reanimator deck.
“ | When Martin Juza won Grand Prix Bochum with a crazy Craterhoof Behemoth concoction, he credited Brad Nelson for the deck design. As the year continued and more cards got added to Standard, the Craterhoofs (and Somberwald Sages) were left behind in favor of Thragtusks and Angels of Serenity. The fundamental synergy between Grisly Salvage, Mulch, and Unburial Rites formed the core of this deck, relying on support from mana Elves. Altogether, variations of this deck won two more Grand Prixs before the format rotated.[1] | ” |
Pod
A Toolbox deck.
“ | While the power of Birthing Pod was only fully realized in the bigger card pool of Modern, where multiple infinite combos could be stitched together, it also saw a fair amount of play in Standard purely as a value card. Gavony Township is an unsurprising superstar, with the rest of the deck consisting primarily of mana creatures and creatures that provide value when they either enter or leave the battlefield.[1] | ” |
Rakdos Aggro
A aggro deck.
“ | Once Return to Ravnica replaced Scars of Mirrodin in Standard, Delver faced some stiff competition from another beatdown deck. There were several different ways to leverage the new aggressive black and hybrid-black cards. Some played around more with Zombie synergies, but pretty much all of them included Geralf's Messenger. Versions of Rakdos won GP Charleston and GP San Antonio, and placed in the Top 8 of Bochum and Quebec as well.[1] | ” |
Tempered Steel
“ | Team ChannelFireball had one of their most dominant Pro Tours ever at Worlds 2011. At that event, they put four different team members into the Top 8, each piloting this artifact-based beatdown deck in Standard. Metalcraft was not as dominant as Affinity was in its day, but you’ll still recognize several of these cards from the current Modern incarnation of the deck[1] | ” |
Tempered Steel was the second best performing deck in the Gauntlet.[2]
UWR Flash
A control deck as played by Shahar Shenhar to win the 2013 World Championship.
“ | Worlds 2013 was won by Shahar Shenhar, wielding what we would now call Jeskai Control as his Standard deck. It’s similar to the Esper control decks in that it can trade resources and win with the card advantage from a big Sphinx's Revelation. But unlike those decks, this one has a lot more creatures, most of which can be played at instant speed, making it capable of shifting roles and winning the game surprisingly quickly.[1] | ” |
Wolf Run Ramp
A deck built around Kessig Wolf Run.
“ | CFB did not claim that World's title. Instead, it went to Jun'ya Iyanaga with an archetype that continued to shape Standard throughout the next year. Four months after Worlds, Brian Kibler won Pro Tour Dark Ascension with his version, sporting six Titans and a full playset of Huntmaster of the Fells to ramp into.[1] | ” |
Wolf Run Ramp was the best performing deck in this Gauntlet, earning a spot in the Best of Throwback Standard Gauntlet[2]
References
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l Randy Buehler (October 25, 2017). "Throwback Standard Gauntlet 8: Innistrad Standard (website)". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on October 30, 2017. Retrieved on May 21, 2025.
- ↑ a b c Randy Buehler (November 29, 2017). "Best of Throwback Standard Gauntlet (website)". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved on May 20, 2025.