2015 League of Legends World Championship

League of Legends World Championship
Tournament information
Location  France
 United Kingdom
 Belgium
 Germany
Dates October 1–October 31
Administrator(s) Riot Games
Tournament format(s) 16 team round-robin group stage
8 team single-elimination bracket
Venue(s) 4 (in 4 host cities)
Teams 16
Purse $2,130,000 USD (€1,907,194.31)
Final positions
Champion SK Telecom T1 (2nd title)
Runner-up KOO Tigers
Tournament statistics
Matches played 73
MVP South Korea Jang "MaRin" Gyeong-hwan (SK Telecom T1)[1]
Highest KDA South Korea Bae "Bang" Jun-sik (SK Telecom T1)[note 1][2]
Highest CSPM Spain Enrique "xPeke" Cedeño Martinez (Origen)[2]
 2014 2016 

The 2015 League of Legends World Championship was the world championship held from October 1–31, 2015 for the multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) video game League of Legends. It was the fifth iteration of the League of Legends World Championship. The different stages of the event were held in various cities across Europe: the group stages in Le Dock Pullman, in Paris, France; the quarterfinals at the Wembley Arena in London, England; the semifinals in the Brussels Expo in Brussels, Belgium; and the finals at Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin, Germany. The 16 teams qualified by either winning a professional league or a regional qualifying tournament.[3] There was a 16 team round-robin group stage followed by an 8 team single elimination bracket. The games were officially streamed on twitch.tv, YouTube and Azubu in several languages. The BBC also streamed the tournament online on BBC Three but for United Kingdom IP addresses only. A peak of around 14 million concurrent viewers watched the finals, according to official sources.

Teams

The following teams qualified to participate in the tournament's group stage:[4]

China (LPL)
Europe (EU LCS)
North America (NA LCS)
South Korea (LCK)
Taiwan, Hong Kong & Macau (LMS)
International Wildcards
  • Bangkok Titans
  • paiN Gaming

Rosters

Team Players
ID Name Role
ahq e-Sports Club
  • Ziv
  • Mountain
  • westdoor
  • AN
  • Albis
  • Backstairs
  • Chen Yi (陳奕)
  • Xue Zhao-Hong (薛兆鴻)
  • Liu Shu-Wei (劉書瑋)
  • Chou Chun-An (周俊諳)
  • Kang Chia-Wei (康家維)
  • Chen Yan-fu (陳彥甫)
  • Top laner
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD carry
  • Support
  • Coach
Bangkok Titans
  • WarL0cK
  • 007x
  • G4
  • Lloyd
  • Moss
  • Cabbage
  • Pawat Ampaporn
  • Chayut Suebka
  • Nuttapong Menkasikan
  • Juckkirsts Kongubon
  • Sorawat Boonphrom
  • Akarawat Wangsawat
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Cloud9
  • An Le
  • Hai Du Lam
  • Nicolaj Jensen
  • Zachary Scuderi
  • Daerek Hart
  • Royce Newcomb
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Counter Logic Gaming
  • Darshan Upadhyaha
  • Jake Puchero
  • Eugene Park
  • Yiliang Peng
  • Zaqueri Black
  • Tony Gray
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
EDward Gaming
  • AmazingJ
  • Koro1
  • ClearLove
  • PawN
  • Deft
  • Meiko
  • Aaron
  • Shek Wai Ho (石偉豪)
  • Tong Yang (童扬)
  • Ming Kai (明凯)
  • Heo Won-seok (허원석)
  • Tian Ye (田野)
  • Ji Xing (姬星)
  • Top
  • Top (sub)
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Flash Wolves
  • Chou Lu-Hsi (周律希)
  • Hung Hau-Hsuan (洪浩軒)
  • Huang Yi-Tang (黃熠棠)
  • Ha Jong-hun (하종훈)
  • Hsiung Wen-An (熊汶銨)
  • Hu Shuo-Jie (胡碩傑)
  • Chen Ju-Chih (陳如治)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Fnatic
  • Heo Seung-hoon (허승훈)
  • Kim Yeu-jin (김의진)
  • Fabian Diepstraten
  • Martin Larsson
  • Bora Kim
  • Luis Sevilla Petit
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
H2k-Gaming
  • Odoamne
  • loulex
  • Ryu
  • Hjärnan
  • kaSing
  • PR0LLY
  • Andrei Pascu
  • Jean-Victor Burgevin
  • Yoo Sang-ook (유상욱)
  • Petter Freyschuss
  • Raymond Tsang
  • Neil Hammad
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Invictus Gaming
  • Zzitai
  • KaKAO
  • RooKie
  • Kid
  • Time
  • Kitties
  • Mafa
  • Liu Zhi-Hao (刘志豪)
  • Lee Byung-kwon (이병권)
  • Song Eui-jin (송의진)
  • Ge Yan (葛炎)
  • Tang Jin-Tai (唐金泰)
  • Liu Hong-Jun (刘洪均)
  • Won Sang-yeon (원상연)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • AD (sub)
  • Support
  • Coach
KOO Tigers
  • Smeb
  • Hojin
  • KurO
  • PraY
  • GorillA
  • NoFe
  • Song Kyung-ho (송경호)
  • Lee Ho-jin (이호진)
  • Lee Seo-haeng (이서행)
  • Kim Jong-in (김종인)
  • Kang Beom-hyeon (강범현)
  • Jeong No-chul (정노철)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
KT Rolster
  • ssumday
  • Score
  • Nagne
  • Arrow
  • Piccaboo
  • Kim Chan-ho (김찬호)
  • Go Dong-bin (고동빈)
  • Kim Sang-moon (김상문)
  • Noh Dong-hyeon (노동현)
  • Lee Jong-beom (이종범)
  • Oh Chang-jong (오창종)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
LGD Gaming
  • Acorn
  • Flame
  • TBQ
  • GODV
  • Pyl
  • FireFox
  • Choi Cheon-ju (최천주)
  • Lee Ho-jong (이호종)
  • Zhu Yong-Quan (朱永权)
  • Wei Lian (韦联)
  • Gu Seung-bin (구승빈)
  • Chen Bo (陈博)
  • Huang Ting-Hsiang (黃鼎翔)
  • Top
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Origen
  • Paul Boyer
  • Maurice Stückenschneider
  • Enrique Cedeño Martínez
  • Jesper Svenningsen
  • Alfonso Aguirre Rodriguez
  • Tadayoshi Littleton
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
paiN Gaming
  • Mylon
  • SirT
  • Kami
  • brTT
  • Dioud
  • MiT
  • Matheus Borges
  • Thúlio Carlos
  • Gabriel Santos
  • Felipe Gonçalves
  • Hugo Padioleau
  • Gabriel Souza
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
SK Telecom T1
  • Jang Gyeong-hwan (장경환)
  • Bae Seong-ung (배성웅)
  • Lee Sang-hyeok (이상혁)
  • Lee Ji-hoon (이지훈)
  • Bae Jun-sik (배준식)
  • Lee Jae-wan (이재완)
  • Kim Jeong-gyun (김정균)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • Mid (sub)
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach
Team SoloMid
  • Marcus Hill
  • Lucas Tao Kilmer Larsen
  • Søren Bjerg
  • Jason Tran
  • Ham Jang-sik (함장식)
  • Choi Yoon-sub (최윤섭)
  • Top
  • Jungle
  • Mid
  • AD
  • Support
  • Coach

Group stage

The group stage was played in a best of one double round-robin format, with the top two teams from each of the four groups advancing to the knockout stage, for a total of eight teams. The group stage started on October 1 in Le Dock Pullman, Paris and concluded on October 11.[4] In Group B, ahq e-Sports Club and Cloud9 both ended in a 3-3 tie, resulting in a tiebreaker won by ahq e-Sports Club to win second place in the group.

Group A

Pos Team Record
1 Flash Wolves 4–2
2 KOO Tigers 4–2
3 Counter Logic Gaming 2–4
3 paiN Gaming 2–4

Group B

Pos Team Record
1 Fnatic 4–2
2 ahq e-Sports Club 4–3
3 Cloud9 3–4
4 Invictus Gaming 2–4

Group C

Pos Team Record
1 SK Telecom T1 6–0
2 EDward Gaming 4–2
3 H2k-Gaming 2–4
4 Bangkok Titans 0–6

Group D

Pos Team Record
1 KT Rolster 5–1
2 Origen 4–2
3 LGD Gaming 2–4
4 Team SoloMid 1–5

Knockout stage

The bracket stage started on October 15 in Wembley Arena in London, continued to Brussels Expo in Brussels, and concluded on October 31 with the grand finals hosted in Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin.[5] The knockout stage has been streamed on BBC Three,[6] while the final will be streamed on ESPN3.[7] The bracket stage is played in a best of 5 format. In the grand final, SK Telecom T1 beat KOO Tigers 3 to 1, dropping their only game of the whole tournament.

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
15 October – Wembley Arena        
  Flash Wolves   1
24 October – Brussels Expo
  Origen   3  
  Origen   0
16 October – Wembley Arena
      SK Telecom T1   3  
  SK Telecom T1   3
31 October – Mercedes-Benz Arena
  ahq e-Sports Club   0  
  SK Telecom T1   3
17 October – Wembley Arena    
    KOO Tigers   1
  Fnatic   3
25 October – Brussels Expo
  EDward Gaming   0  
  Fnatic   0
18 October – Wembley Arena
      KOO Tigers   3  
  KT Rolster   1
  KOO Tigers   3  
 

Final standings

Place Team Prize money[8]
1st SK Telecom T1 $1,000,000
2nd KOO Tigers $250,000
3rd–4th Fnatic $150,000
Origen
5–8th ahq e-Sports Club $75,000
EDward Gaming
Flash Wolves
KT Rolster
9–11th Cloud9 $45,000
H2k-Gaming
LGD Gaming
12–13th Counter Logic Gaming $35,000
paiN Gaming
14–16th Bangkok Titans $25,000
Invictus Gaming
Team SoloMid

Viewership numbers

The final was expected to have over 30 million people streaming it online.[9] The finals were watched by 36 million people, with a peak concurrent viewership of 14 million viewers.[10]

Controversies

Obscenity incident

During the final day of the group stage in Paris, Cloud9's Hai "Hai" Lam made an obscene gesture towards an opponent while on stage. Hai was fined €500.[11]

Technical issues

In game 2 of the quarterfinals between Fnatic and EDward Gaming, an in-game bug occurred to Fnatic's Kim "Reignover" Ui-Jin which prevented the game from continuing, forcing the game to be remade from scratch. After investigating the issue, Riot Games chose to disable Gragas, the champion Reignover was playing, for the rest of the tournament, along with Lux and Ziggs, champions who were deemed susceptible to the same issue.[12]

Notes

  1. Tang "Time" Jintai, the substitute player of Invictus Gaming, had the overall highest KDA of 22.0; however, he only played one game.

References

  1. Magrino, Tom (October 31, 2015). "SKT rises above KOO Tigers 3-1 to become the 2015 World Champion". LoL Esports. Riot Games. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  2. 1 2 "World Championship – Stats". LoL Esports. Riot Games. Retrieved December 21, 2015.
  3. "League of Legends World Championships: What you need to know". BBC. October 15, 2015. Retrieved October 18, 2015.
  4. 1 2 Fields, Frank (September 7, 2015). "Everything you need to know about the 2015 World Championship". Retrieved September 15, 2015.
  5. "2015 World Championship Venues | LoL Esports". Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  6. Ward, Mark (October 16, 2015). "League of Legends makes global gains". BBC. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  7. http://espn.go.com/espn/photos/gallery/_/id/13497547/image/1/team-clg-gets-focused-league-legends-finals
  8. "2015 World Championship Rules" (PDF). Riot Games. July 7, 2015. pp. 5–6. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  9. Ramgobin, Ryan (October 30, 2015). "SKT rises above KOO Tigers 3-1 to become the 2015 World Champion". The Independent. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  10. "League of Legends 2015 ChampionShip Saw 334 million Unique Impressions | SegmentNext". Retrieved 2015-12-10.
  11. Leigh, Hunter (October 21, 2015). "Competitive Ruling: C9 Hai". LoL Esports. Riot Games. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  12. Leigh, Hunter (October 18, 2015). "Gragas Disabled for Rest of Worlds 2015". LoL Esports. Riot Games. Retrieved October 25, 2015.

External links

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