Final NA LCS Summer Split Power Rankings (Week 9)
The 2017 North American LCS Summer Split has come to a close. Did we all enjoy ourselves?
Team SoloMid earned the top playoff seed with a thrilling Classico sweep of Counter Logic Gaming, but their hegemony over NA LCS has never been more in doubt. Immortals and Cloud 9 looked to be in peak form entering postseason play, with Team Dignitas and CLG only a half-step behind. Book your flights to Boston soon, because whatever combination of four teams makes the trip, expect nothing short of fireworks.
The League of Legends meta is more diverse than any time in recent memory. Ardent Censer has brought shielding supports back from the dead to compete with their playmaking brethren. Perma-bans in the jungle and bot lane have opened power picks in the mid lane. Lethality is back, and Jhin came with it. Jarvan IV, Maokai, Cho’Gath and Gragas can flexed top or jungle with equal effectiveness. It’s a boom time for pocket strategies and matchup-specific drafts. Playoffs can’t come soon enough.
Week 9 was mostly chalk, but a little mystery remained with two teams battling for Regionals or relegation. FlyQuest and Phoenix 1 both nursed Worlds ambitions, but only one team will have a chance to make good on them. It has to be the club with Spring’s MVP, right?
Read on and find out…but if you don’t like waiting, may I suggest speeding up with a Righteous Glory? Charge in and enjoy my final NA LCS Power Rankings of 2017.
Sweeps of Phoenix 1 and Counter Logic Gaming confirmed what we already knew: Team SoloMid remains the class of NA LCS and the elite of a now-crowded upper crust. A perfect weekend that ended with a Classico statement secured TSM a playoff bye and semifinal match against the lowest remaining seed. Nothing less was deserved.
Amid the many accurate superlatives you could use to describe TSM, “consistent” stands out. Of their 14 Summer Split wins, 11 of them (79%) were 2-0 sweeps. TSM complied a 16-1 game record against, and never lost a match to, non-playoff teams. Only Team Dignitas had a winning game record over TSM this split (4-1), and both times Dig caught them experimenting with a new patch. TSM swept every other playoff team at least once.
Perhaps no TSM player embodies consistency better than Bjergsen, a rock in mid lane that has girded the team for years. If Doublelift is the pointy end of the TSM stick, Bjergsen is the hand that holds the spear. He rarely gets outplayed in the laning stage, and is the only NA mid laner to not feed First Blood all Split (excluding Mickey, who’s been here a week). With OP champions in the jungle and bot lane soaking up bans, it’s rarely been easier for mid laners to select a comfort champion, and Bjergsen has taken full advantage. Syndra, Talyiah and Cassiopeia make up 59% of his games this Split, 24 total in which he’s 21-3. Giving the best player in the league his preferred champions proved to be a winning strategy. Who knew?
The best team in NA now has two weeks to prepare for their semifinal match against Dignitas, Cloud 9, or—in the unlikely event CLG loses in the Quarterfinals—Team EnVyUs. Hopefully the new patch jitters can be worked out off-stage this time.
Team SoloMid may have secured the top playoff seed, but no team in North America entered the postseason hotter than Immortals. Noah’s Boys are cooking with gas, incinerating Team EnVyUs and Echo Fox in matches that were never competitive. At the 20-minute mark, Immortals enjoyed leads of 4.6k, 4.7k, 9.1k, and in Game 1 against Envy, 12.2k. Their playoff bye was well earned, ensuring—at minimum—40 Championship Points, enough to qualify for Regionals.
Of course, if Immortals keep playing at this level, they might win the whole thing in Boston and forgo Regionals entirely. Fast or slow, bloody or conservative, Immortals win using any style. Flame’s individual outplay of Seraph will top the highlight reels, but his team has become more than the sum of its excellent parts.
At the center of this rebound from Spring Split’s disappointing mid-table finish is Xmithie, whose reunion with Pobelter has dramatically improved the fortunes of both. His powers were never more on display than in Game 1 versus Envy, where he correctly predicted Lira’s blue steal, triggering a team fight that would essentially decide the game. Olleh is making an MVP case from the support position, Flame is dynamite top and Cody Sun has proved the difference in fights time and again, but it's Xmithie’s cool-headed shotcalling and leadership that has Immortals on the front foot.
A CLG win in the quarterfinals would set up an IMT/CLG semi, resuming a heated season series Immortals lead 2-0, 4-1. They've given no indication that the result will change in the slightest.
27-2-22.
That was Jensen’s stat line over the weekend. Call him a KDA player if you must, but before you do, please watch the actual games. Observe his laning dominance, his understanding of what position best avoids the enemy jungler. Marvel at the farm leads, the careful roaming, the application of damage at the right time, enough to get the job done but never quite top the chart. It isn’t KDA padding if you’re better than everyone else.
Cloud 9 steamrolled their way into playoffs against Team EnVyUs and Echo Fox, deciding the latter series in record time (49:36). Game 2 saw Echo Fox lost their top inhibitor in 17 minutes. At 21:32 the game was over, the quickest defeat of 2017 (in North America) and a fitting end to a six-game stretch by Cloud 9 that featured one-sided wins against each of the bottom five teams. Whatever sickness befell C9 around Rift Rivals has passed; this team is exacting, decisive, and lethal.
Lost in Jensen’s brilliance and Olleh’s excellence in the support role is Smoothie. After a mostly anonymous first half of the Split, Smoothie’s found new life on dynamic engage supports like Taric, Alistar and Blitzcrank. He’s undefeated on Taric, a champion we should be seeing much more of across the world due to a kit that combines tankiness, playmaking, Ardent Censer heals, and Righteous Glory charges like none other. No more Braum or Thresh, give the guy Fabio and watch him clean up. If anything, Smoothie needs the practice after a few mistimed Cosmic Radiances against Envy.
Cloud 9 face Team Dignitas in the Quarterfinals. More stellar play will earn them a Semifinal date with TSM (assuming, as we all do, that CLG will beat Envy).
Losing the Classico is a rotten way to enter playoffs, but Counter Logic Gaming shouldn’t let that subpar showing muddy what was a solid Summer Split. CLG were close, but a sloppy Game 2 was decided by TSM clutching out a hectic 5v5 during an Elder push. A win over Team Dignitas was more than I expected of CLG, earning them a favorable matchup with Team EnVyUs in the Quarterfinals. Perhaps just as importantly, CLG will now avoid TSM until a potential Finals match.
All eyes were on OmarGod over the weekend, wondering how the rookie would fare during a pair of high-pressure matches. Apart from a few missed casks, Omar acquitted himself well, standing tall in team fights and ganking effectively. The Sejuani draft in Game 1 against TSM was questionable, but the fault in Omar’s lackluster performances lies more with CLG than the player. Debuting his Sejuani with Gragas available probably wasn’t the way to calm Omar’s nerves. While the champion has made noticeable waves in soloqueue, Sejuani hasn’t had the same impact in NA LCS, posting a poor 1-6 record when picked to jungle.
Alistar has brought his cowbell to NA LCS, and no other support has looked better on the champion that Aphromoo. He’s only logged a pair of Alistar games this Split (both Week 9 appearances), but the cow fits Aphro’s aggressive style perfectly. The contrast between his Karma and Alistar games against Dignitas was night and day. Losing Game 2 against TSM after landing several multi-player knockups was borderline criminal. Expect to see more 'Moo play against Envy next weekend.
For the second week in a row, Team Dignitas decided to throw a game with blatant on-stage experimentation. Last week it was Karthus mid; this week we saw Ssumday lock in the recently-buffed Nasus against CLG in a series that could have earned Dig third place. Instead, Dignitas were punished in three games and now face red-hot Cloud 9 in the Quarterfinals.
Dignitas have built their late-season revival on aggressive objective takes, winning through bot lane and using drakes plus an early Baron to decide games in one power play. So it was odd to see them return to the steady late game split push that proved ineffective for most of the season. Ssumday failed to influence any meaningful fight across the CLG series, relying on Altec to carry them forward. A masterful Tristana showing forced Game 3, but placing Adrian on the unfamiliar Taric instead of Thresh was a mistake despite an unfavorable Alistar matchup.
The Liquid series was never close despite some exciting picks. Dignitas were heavily counter picked in Game 2 after drafting Blitzcrank and Elise. In response, Piglet brought the mobile Vayne—his favorite champion—onstage, and Dardoch grabbed Lee Sin, escaping the tank meta for one game. Credit Keane for his predictive roaming and damage output on Taliyah—a champion that has rocketed up the pick/ban list across the league in recent weeks—for holding off a spicy Liquid squad eager to give their fans something to cheer for.
If the Dignitas that gave TSM the business twice this Split shows up against Cloud 9, then we have a series. Otherwise, C9 will take full advantage of Dig’s propensity to throw games during the draft and advance out of the Quarterfinals.
Take a moment and consider where Team EnVyUs were this time last Split. 3-15, 14-31 and facing a promotion tournament they would barely escape, Envy didn’t appear to belong in North America’s top flight. The mid lane was a mess, bot lane couldn’t transition early advantages into mid game objectives, and Lira lacked the omnipresence to put out every fire (yet still made 1st NA LCS All-Pro Team). Now look at Envy; +5 match wins, +7 game wins, and qualified for playoffs. What a difference a split can make. Just ask Immortals (or Phoenix 1).
It’s easy to criticize Envy’s horrid last two weeks, but don’t forget how far this team has come. Making playoffs is a commendable accomplishment, and everyone in the organization should be proud of what they've achieved. Apollo and Hakuho have flourished, Nisqy has held his own against some of the best mids in the world, and Lira continues to impress.
However, if the last two weeks are any indication, Envy’s playoff run will end in the Quarterfinals. Weeks 8 and 9 have shown that, while capable of handling inferior opposition, Envy are outclassed by the upper echelon of NA LCS. CLG will enter the postseason knowing exactly how to destabilize them: Early emphasis on harassing Lira and a superior top lane matchup Envy can’t do much to rectify.
Speaking of top lane, if Envy have any chance against CLG, Seraph will need to regain some semblance of competence in the top lane. He was a wretched 2-25-10 across Week 9 (0.48 KDA), failing to effectively frontline and was repeatedly solo killed by Impact. In the mid lane, Nisqy came down with “Froggen-itis” by posting excellent numbers yet failing to turn them into objectives or meaningful kills.
It’s true: Envy backed into playoffs, but making playoffs at all was the goal. They’ve got the talent to make CLG sweat, but lack the cohesion to give a synergistic group of veterans much trouble.
FlyQuest kept their dreams of Worlds alive with a 2-0 weekend over Phoenix 1 and Team Liquid, relegating both in the process. A 7th-place finish allows FlyQuest to keep their 30 Championship Points, likely enough to secure a spot a Regionals.
It was fortuitous that FlyQuest faced, in their year-defining weekend, two out of the four teams they had previously beaten. The Liquid series saw LemonNation unveil a clever pocket strat: Stoneborn Pact on Morgana support. It was a stroke of genius, allowing FlyQuest to proc Ardent Censer heals from hitting enemies bound by Morgana’s Dark Binding. Morgana has no healing in her kit, only a Black Shield to take advantage of Ardent Censer’s bonus shielding. With a single keystone mastery change (Thunderlord’s Decree or Windspeaker’s Blessing are the usual suspects), Lemon increased the efficiency of his build and gave his team extra sustain in fights. Bravo.
FlyQuest drafted the same composition in their two wins, both designed to jump on Piglet before Liquid had a chance to protect him. Lourlo countered with a Nautilus top that, in combination with Matt’s Blitzcrank/Thresh, aimed to lock down WildTurtle. The series boiled down to which team could kill the other’s ADC first in a late team fight, and once Hai caught out Piglet alone with a heroic Package Valkyrie deep into Game 3, FlyQuest sent Liquid down.
Hai and Moon were magnificent in tandem during the P1 series, owning Game 1 with an early snowball that never stopped rolling, and stalling out Game 2 long enough for Turtle to carry them forward. Balls finished with a game-high six kills on his Gnar, helping FlyQuest secure a crucial Baron to complete the comeback and end P1’s postseason hopes.
No playoffs for FlyQuest this split, but I’ll bet we haven’t seen the last of them or their unique ideas in 2017. Keep updating that notebook, Lemon.
It wouldn’t be a Disney property without Mickey. Team Liquid’s latest Korean import made his NA LCS debut to little fanfare, apart from Steve himself appearing on Riot’s air to justify his personnel moves.
Mickey posted decent numbers in the mid lane (4.0 KDA, 9.8 CSM, +2.8 CSD@15) and looked useful on Orianna, but the Ekko against Team Dignitas was a bit optimistic. Still, Mickey’s appearance did little to prevent Liquid’s inevitable relegation. It was a signing best viewed with an eye towards the future. Steve continues to throw gobs of money at foreign talent in an attempt to buy Liquid back into prominence, but this is now the second split in a row Liquid have finished bottom two. Is money the savior they need?
Liquid, as it's currently formed, actually does a few things well. Piglet has been as solid and ADC as you can expect, especially when he gets to bring out old favorites like Vayne. Matt’s hooks and roams during the FlyQuest series woke up echoes of Olleh’s best, a testament to his continued improvement. Lourlo has his moments in the top lane, game to adopt whatever strategy the team draws up (he’s played 16 different champions this Split).
But in a league that emphasizes mid-jungle synergy, it’s Liquid’s misfortune that those two positions have seen the most turnover week to week. Mickey’s addition forced both Goldenglue and Reignover to the bench, by far the best-looking combination of the many Liquid tried. Inori and Slooshi had their shots and were found wanting. Dardoch returned to his old team willing to champion tanks if necessary, but watching him dash around on Lee Sin makes you wonder if Liquid should eschew meta entirely and get him back on carries. He looked like a completely different player, and what do Liquid have to lose?
I’m positive we’ll see Liquid back in the LCS come 2018, regardless of their finish in the Promotion Tournament. A 3-0 win over E-United on Friday gives them two bites at the apple, but even if they crash out, Liquid’s financing and history create a franchising application Riot won’t be able to refuse. We’ll see Liquid again soon, in one form or another.
To paraphrase Dumas…Esports is a storm, my friends. You will bask in third place one moment, be condemned to relegation the next. What makes you a team is what you do when that storm comes.
The corpse of Phoenix 1 lies somewhere aground on a nearby shoal. Given the opportunity to compete at Regionals with a match win over FlyQuest, P1 failed to stand tall in a storm. I yearned for the courage they showed during the TSM series—drafting Draven and Shyvana in Game 2—to carry over against FlyQuest, but it never did.
When the chips were down, P1 continued to put MikeYeung on tanks he cannot competitively play, and attempted an Kog’Maw comp they hadn’t won with in seven previous tries. When that failed, P1 returned to a deathball draft (Kled/Maokai/Corki/Sivir/Taric) that worked against Cloud 9 a few weeks earlier, but it now lacked the crucial element of surprise. FlyQuest smartly waited out the lineup’s mid game power spike and shut the door late. The look of exhausted defeat mixed with disbelief was written over the faces of every P1 player as FlyQuest came by for the customary post-game handshake. Arrow was so stunned he momentarily forgot to stand up.
With the talent Phoenix 1 possesses, they should successfully navigate Promotion. After that, the fate of this roster is anyone’s guess. Ryu, Arrow, and Xpecial are veterans nearing the tail-end of their careers. How will P1 replace them? On the business side, do P1 have the investment to qualify for franchising? Here’s hoping they’ll once again rise from the ashes in 2018.
That smoking ruin you see in 8th Place is what remains of Echo Fox after Immortals and Cloud 9 were through with them. No team had a shorter weekend or looked more disinterested in being there, as Echo Fox had neither playoffs to fight for nor relegation to escape. It showed.
Froggen continues to be an outstanding mid laner surrounded by players that cannot rise to his level. Playing Jensen and Cloud 9 was akin to watching Superman fight Bizzaro; two exceptional Danish mids surrounded by vastly different supporting casts, mirror images slightly off. Froggen’s Talon pick against Immortals and subsequent kills to nowhere underscored a long-simmering frustration with his team’s inconsistency and lackluster year. Echo Fox could learn a lot from the way C9 utilizes Jensen’s magnetism to gain map control, but that’s a discussion for another time.
Rick Fox seems heavily invested in League of Legends, so expect Echo Fox to return in 2018. Hopefully their Frontline/Backline system—aka stealth tryouts for Spring—paid off, because it cost them Summer Playoffs.