[go: nahoru, domu]

Magic: The Gathering World Championship


Magic: The Gathering World Championships
Year Winner Held in
1994 Zak Dolan Milwaukee, WI, United States
1995 Alexander Blumke Seattle, WA, United States
1996 Tom Chanpheng Seattle, WA, United States
1997 Jakub Slemr Seattle, WA, United States
1998 Brian Selden Seattle, WA, United States
1999 Kai Budde Yokohama, Japan
2000 Jon Finkel Brussels, Belgium
2001 Tom van de Logt Toronto, ON, Canada
2002 Carlos Romão Sydney, Australia
2003 Daniel Zink Berlin, Germany
2004 Julien Nuijten San Francisco, CA, United States
2005 Katsuhiro Mori Yokohama, Japan
2006 Makihito Mihara Paris, France
2007 Uri Peleg New York City, NY, United States
2008 Antti Malin Memphis, TN, United States
2009 André Coimbra Rome, Italy
2010 Guillaume Matignon Chiba, Japan
2011 Jun'ya Iyanaga San Francisco, CA, United States
2012 Yuuya Watanabe* Seattle, WA, United States
2013 Shahar Shenhar Amsterdam, Netherlands
2014 Shahar Shenhar Nice, France
2015 Seth Manfield Seattle, WA, United States
2016 Brian Braun-Duin Seattle, WA, United States
2017 William Jensen Boston, MA, United States
2018 Javier Dominguez Las Vegas, NV, United States
2019 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa Honolulu, HI, United States
2021 Yuta Takahashi MTG Arena
2022 Nathan Steuer Las Vegas, NV, United States (on MTG Arena)
2023 Jean-Emmanuel Depraz Las Vegas, NV, United States
* Watanabe won the Players Championship

The Magic: The Gathering World Championships (Worlds) have been held annually since 1994. It is the most important tournament in the game of Magic: The Gathering,[according to whom?] offering cash prizes of up to $100,000 to the winners. With the exception of the first edition, Worlds is an invitation-only event, and from 1996 to 2011 World was the last event of each Pro Tour season. The invitees were mostly top finishers from the National championships, the top-ranked players of the DCI and high-level pro players. Since 2012 the World Championships are held after the season and the most successful 16 or 24 players have been invited to the tournament.

After the first five World Championships were all held in the United States, Worlds have since been held in Japan, Australia and various countries in Europe. Besides the main event Worlds were always a huge gathering of Magic players, who came to watch the pros and compete in side events.

After the 2011 season, the World Championship was briefly replaced by the Magic Players Championship. The top 16 pro players selected due to various criteria were invited to the Players Championship. In 2013 the tournament was renamed to 'World Championship' once again. From 2014 to 2018 the tournament was expanded to 24 competitors, but is going back to 16 players for the 2019 Worlds.

The large World Championships, held until 2011, also included a national team portion where the top players from each National Championship engaged in a separate competition. The decision to abandon large World Championships would have left the community without such an event. In part due to heavy demand by the players, Wizards of the Coast decided to create a replacement after initially abandoning the national team competition. A new team competition, the World Magic Cup was held annually from 2012 to 2017.

Twenty five World Championships have been held since 1994. The most successful contestant is Shahar Shenhar, the only player to win Worlds twice. In the team portion the United States are by far the most successful country, having won 8 out of 23 editions.

History

edit
 
A view over the hall at the 2009 Magic Worlds in Rome

The first World Championship was held in 1994 at the Gen Con fair in Milwaukee. The tournament was open to all competitors, and its mode was single-elimination.[1]

After 15 years in which the Worlds underwent only minor changes, major changes were announced in 2011. For 2012, the World Championships would be replaced by a 16-player invitational event named the Magic: The Gathering Players Championship. The Pro Player of the Year title was discontinued in favor of the Players Championship, thus attempting to merge the major individual titles, the World Champion and the Pro Player of the Year. However, for the next season, the Players Championship was renamed to World Championship and Pro Player of the Year was made a separate title once again.[2] Originally the team portion of Worlds was planned to be discontinued, but after public outcry from the players Wizards decided to create a replacement, the World Magic Cup.[3]

Mode

edit

For 2015, it was initially announced that the World Championship and the World Magic Cup would be held on separate weeks, sharing the same venue. However, it was later announced that these events would be held at different locations and at different times.[4]

Participants

edit

World Championship

edit

Prior to 2012, the following players were eligible to play in the World Championship:[5]

  • Current World Champion
  • 2nd to 8th-place finishers from the previous World Championship.
  • Current Pro Player of the Year.
  • For countries that hold an invitation-only National Championship, the three members of each national team and that team's designated alternate.
  • For countries that hold an open National Championship, the winner of that National Championship.
  • Players with Pro Tour Players Club level 4 or higher. (This includes all members of the Hall of Fame.)
  • Players with Pro Tour Players Club level 3 that have not yet used their Players Club invitation
  • Top 25 DCI Total-ranked players from the APAC region.
  • Top 25 DCI Total-ranked players from Japan.
  • Top 50 DCI Total-ranked players from the Europe region.
  • Top 50 DCI Total-ranked players from the Latin America region.
  • Top 50 DCI Total-ranked players from the North America region.
  • Players invited to the Magic Online Championship held the same week (New in 2009).[6]

(Compare Magic Premier Event Invitation Policy).

On 2 November 2011, Wizards of the Coast announced a major change to the structure of the World Championship.[7] It was announced that as of 2012, the individual World Championship would be renamed the Magic Players Championship,[3] though the tournament would later revert to its original title, and move from being a Pro Tour-sized event to an exclusive sixteen-person tournament. These sixteen players will be the:

  • Previous World Champion/Magic Players Champion
  • Previous Magic Online Champion Series Champion
  • Winners of the previous three Pro Tours
  • The top-ranked player from each geo-region (Asia Pacific, Europe, Japan, Latin America, and North America) in the Planeswalker Points Yearly Professional Total in previous' season who are not yet invited based on the above criteria
  • The top-ranked players in previous' season worldwide Planeswalker Points Yearly Professional Total who are not yet invited based on the above criteria sufficient to bring the total number of invited players to the World Championship to sixteen. Should multiple players finished in the same position, the player with a better standing in his/her best Pro Tour in that season will have an advantage.

In 2012, it was also decided to invite the 2011 Pro Player of the Year, Owen Turtenwald, though it was intended that the title be retired in that year.

In 2014, the tournament was expanded to 24 players. Additional invites were granted to the players ranked 2nd place from each geo-region, the fourth Pro-Tour winner, the Rookie of the Year, and the top-ranked player from the World Magic Cup winning country in the previous season, will be also invited.

In a 2015 revision,[4] the Rookie of the Year invitation was replaced by the top-ranked player in terms of Pro Points earned in Grand Prix events (to which the point cap does not apply). Further revisions include a change in geo-region invitations, which have been increased to Top 3 for Europe and Asia-Pacific (which now includes Japan) and Top 4 for North America, at the expense of at-large slots. Effective after the 2015 World Championship, the captain of the previous season's World Magic Cup winning team would also no longer receive an invite.

Team World Championship

edit

The Team World Championship consists of three-player teams, with each team representing one country. Players that are eligible to play in the Team World Championship are the first, second and third place players at a country's National Championship.

World Magic Cup

edit

In 2012, the Team World Championship became a single separate event called the 'World Magic Cup'.[3] This national team event consists of four-player teams representing selected countries. The four players eligible to play in each national team will be the three winners of World Magic Cup qualifiers and the National Champion (the player finished with most Pro Points in previous season) of the country.[8] The National Champion is the highest ranked player from that country in that year's rankings.[9]

Until 2013, all players in top 4 will be invited into the following Pro Tour with airfare expense paid. It was expanded to top 8 teams since 2014. In 2013 and 2014 running, the National Champion of the winning team was also invited to the following year's World Championship.

1994 World championship

edit
Zak Dolan – 1994 World Championship[10]
Angel Stasis
Main Deck Sideboard

The first Magic World Championship was held at the Gen Con in Milwaukee, USA on 19–21 August 1994. It is the only Worlds tournament which was held in the Vintage format, though it wasn't known as such at the time because there was only one sanctioned format. The 1994 Worlds is also the only Worlds which was not an invite-only tournament. Instead, everybody could register, but the tournament was capped at 512 participants. After two days of single elimination play the final four players featured Bertrand Lestrée, who defeated Cyrille DeFoucaud 2–0 in his semi-final, and Zak Dolan, who defeated Dominic Symens 2–0 in the other semi-final. In the final Dolan defeated Lestrée 2–1.[1]

Final standings
  1. United States  Zak Dolan
  2. France  Bertrand Lestrée
  3. Belgium  Dominic Symens
  4. France  Cyrille de Foucaud

1995 World championship

edit
Alexander Blumke – 1995 World Championship[11]
Rack Control
Main Deck Sideboard

The second Magic World Championship was held on 4–6 August at the Red Lion Inn in Seattle, USA.[12] 71 players from 19 countries participated. The tournament featured five rounds of Sealed Deck on the first day and five rounds of Standard, then known as Type II, on the second day. In each round three games were played and three points were awarded for each individual game won instead of completed matches as today.[13][14] After 30 games five players were tied at 19 wins. Blumke and Redi advanced to the top eight after a playoff.[14] The top 8 on Sunday were played with the Standard decks from the day before. In the final Alexander Blumke defeated Marc Hernandez 3–2.[15]

Final standings

  1. Switzerland  Alexander Blumke
  2. France  Marc Hernandez
  3. United States  Mark Justice
  4. United States  Henry Stern
  5. Italy  Ivan Curina
  6. Italy  Andrea Redi
  7. Finland  Henri Schildt
  8. Austria  Mu-Luen Wang
Team champion
  1. United States  United States – Mark Justice, Henry Stern, Peter Leiher, Michael Long
  2. Finland  Finland – Rosendahl, Henri Schildt, Kimmo Hovi, Punakallio
  3. Australia  Australia – Glenn Shanley, Christopher Hudson, Russell, Liew
  4. France  France – Marc Hernandez, Moulin, Woirgard, Lebas

1996 World championship

edit
Tom Chanpheng – 1996 World Championship
White Weenie
Main Deck Sideboard

The third Magic World Championship was held at the Wizards headquarters in Seattle, USA. It was the first Worlds also to be a Pro Tour. 125 players competed in the event.[16] The tournament featured six rounds each of Booster Draft, Standard (Type II), and Legacy (Type 1.5).[17][18] For each match two points were awarded to the winner. In case of a draw both players received one point.[18] For the first time the World Championship also included an official team portion.

Final standings

  1. Australia  Tom Chanpheng
  2. United States  Mark Justice
  3. United States  Henry Stern
  4. Sweden  Olle Råde
  5. United States  Matt Place
  6. United States  Scott Johns
  7. Canada  Eric Tam
  8. Finland  Tommi Hovi

Note that Chanpheng's winning deck included a Sleight of Mind, but no sources of blue mana. This stemmed from an error in his submitted decklist, which was supposed to include some number of Adarkar Wastes in place of Plains.

Tom's victory was commemorated with a unique card, named 1996 World Champion.

Team final
  1. United States  United States – Dennis Bentley, George Baxter, Mike Long, Matt Place
  2. Czech Republic  Czech Republic – David Korejtko, Jakub Slemr, Ondrej Baudys, Lukas Kocourek
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Sweden  Olle Råde
  2. United States  Shawn "Hammer" Regnier
  3. United States  Mark Justice

1997 World championship

edit
Jakub Slemr – 1997 World Championship
Four Color Black
Main Deck Sideboard

The fourth Magic World Championship was held on 13–17 August 1997 in Seattle, USA.[19] 153 players competed in the event.[20] It was the first Magic tournament to be filmed by ESPN2 and was covered in Sports Illustrated.[19][21] The competition featured Standard, Mirage-Visions-Weatherlight Rochester Draft, and Extended,[17] and Fifth Edition-Weatherlight Team Sealed for the team portion.

Final standings

  1. Czech Republic  Jakub Slemr
  2. Germany  Janosch Kühn
  3. Canada  Paul McCabe
  4. Denmark  Svend Geertsen
  5. Canada  Gabriel Tsang
  6. Sweden  Nikolai Weibull
  7. United States  Nate Clark
  8. United States  John Chinnock
Team final
  1. Canada  Canada – Gary Krakower, Michael Donais, Ed Ito, Gabriel Tsang
  2. Sweden  Sweden – Nikolai Weibull, Mattias Jorstedt, Marcus Angelin, Johan Cedercrantz
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Canada  Paul McCabe
  2. Canada  Terry Borer

1998 World championship

edit
Brian Selden – 1998 World Championship
RecSur
Main Deck Sideboard

The fifth Magic World Championship was held on 12–16 August 1998 in Seattle, USA. This tournament featured a Tempest-Stronghold-Exodus Booster Draft, Standard, and Tempest Block Constructed.[17]

203 players competed in the event.[22] The USA dominated the top 8, taking seven of the eight slots. The USA also won the team competition.[17]

Finishing order
  1. United States  Brian Selden
  2. United States  Ben Rubin
  3. United States  Jon Finkel
  4. France  Raphaël Lévy
  5. United States  Scott Johns
  6. United States  Chris Pikula
  7. United States  Brian Hacker
  8. United States  Alan Comer
Team final
  1. United States  United States – Matt Linde, Mike Long, Bryce Currence, Jon Finkel
  2. France  France – Pierre Malherbaud, Manuel Bevand, Marc Hernandez, Fabien Demazeau
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. United States  Jon Finkel
  2. United States  Randy Buehler
  3. United States  Steven O'Mahoney-Schwartz
Rookie of the Year
  1. United States  Randy Buehler

1999 World championship

edit
Kai Budde – 1999 World Championship
Wildfire
Main Deck Sideboard

The sixth Magic World Championship was held on 4–8 August 1999 at the Yokohama Pacifico in Yokohama, Japan. This tournament featured an Urza's Saga-Urza's Legacy-Urza's Destiny Rochester Draft, Standard, and Extended.[17]

208 players from 32 countries competed in the event.[23] In the final Kai Budde defeated Mark Le Pine 3–0 in about 20 minutes, the quickest Pro Tour final ever. Budde's win was the first of his seven Pro Tour victories. By winning this title he also claimed the first of his four Pro Player of the Year titles.[17]

Finishing order
  1. Germany  Kai Budde
  2. United States  Mark Le Pine
  3. Italy  Raffaele Lo Moro
  4. United States  Matt Linde
  5. Czech Republic  Jakub Slemr
  6. United States  Jamie Parke
  7. Canada  Gary Wise
  8. Norway  Nicolai Herzog
Team final
  1. United States  United States – Kyle Rose, John Hunka, Zvi Mowshowitz, Charles Kornblith
  2. Germany  Germany – Marco Blume, Patrick Mello, David Brucker, Rosario Maij
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Germany  Kai Budde
  2. United States  Jon Finkel
  3. United States  Casey McCarrel
Rookie of the Year
  1. Germany  Dirk Baberowski

2000 World championship

edit
Jon Finkel – 2000 World Championship
Tinker
Main Deck Sideboard

The seventh Magic World Championship was held in Brussels, Belgium on 2–6 August 2000. It was the first time the Worlds were held in Europe. The tournament featured a Mercadian Masques-Nemesis-Prophecy Booster Draft, Mercadian Masques Block Constructed, and Standard.[17]

273 players from 46 countries competed in the event.[24] In the final Jon Finkel defeated his friend, Bob Maher. Both played nearly identical decks with a difference of just one card.[17]

Finishing order
  1. United States  Jon Finkel
  2. United States  Bob Maher, Jr.
  3. Germany  Dominik Hothow
  4. Austria  Benedikt Klauser
  5. Netherlands  Tom van de Logt
  6. Austria  Helmut Summersberger
  7. Germany  Janosch Kühn
  8. France  Nicolas Labarre
Team final
  1. United States  United States – Jon Finkel, Chris Benafel, Frank Hernandez, Aaron Forsythe
  2. Canada  Canada – Ryan Fuller, Murray Evans, Gabriel Tsang, Sam Lau
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. United States  Bob Maher, Jr.
  2. United States  Darwin Kastle
  3. United States  Jon Finkel
Rookie of the Year
  1. United States  Brian Davis

2001 World championship

edit
Tom van de Logt – 2001 World Championship
Machine Head
Main Deck Sideboard

The eighth Magic World Championship was held on 8–12 August 2001 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The tournament featured Invasion-Planeshift-Apocalypse Rochester Draft, Standard, and Extended as individual formats and Invasion block team Rochester as the team format.[25]

296 players from 51 countries competed in the tournament.[26] Tom van de Logt from the Netherlands came out as the new world champion, garnering a prize of $35,000 for his victory (as well as another $1,000 for the success of the Dutch team he was part of). Other finalists included future World Series of Poker bracelet winner Alex Borteh (2nd place), Antoine Ruel (3rd place), Andrea Santin (4th place), Mike Turian (5th place), Jan Tomcani (6th place), Tommi Hovi (7th place), and David Williams (disqualified).[25] John Ormerod did not make the top 8 finishers, but was awarded 8th place after David Williams was disqualified for a marked deck.[27] The team competition was won by the US team, which defeated Norway in the team final.[25]

Finishing Order
  1. Netherlands  Tom van de Logt
  2. United States  Alex Borteh
  3. France  Antoine Ruel
  4. Italy  Andrea Santin
  5. United States  Mike Turian
  6. Slovakia  Jan Tomcani
  7. Finland  Tommi Hovi
  8. England  John Ormerod
Team final
  1. United States  United States – Trevor Blackwell, Brian Hegstad, Eugene Harvey
  2. Norway  Norway – Nicolai Herzog, Oyvind Odegaard, Jan Pieter Groenhof
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Germany  Kai Budde
  2. Netherlands  Kamiel Cornelissen
  3. United States  Michael Pustilnik
Rookie of the Year
  1. Japan  Katsuhiro Mori

2002 World championship

edit
Carlos Romão – 2002 World Championship
Psychatog
Main Deck Sideboard

The ninth Magic World Championship was held on 14–18 August 2002 at Fox Studios in Sydney, Australia. The tournament featured Odyssey-Torment-Judgment Booster Draft, Odyssey Block Constructed, and Standard as individual formats and Odyssey Team Rochester Draft as the team format.[25]

245 players from 46 countries competed in the tournament.[28] Twenty-four-year-old Carlos "Jaba" Romão from São Paulo, Brazil came out as world champion, defeating Mark Ziegner 3–2 in the final, thereby garnering a prize of $35,000 with the help of his blue/black "Psychatog" deck. Germany won the team competition, defeating the United States in the final 2–1.

Finishing order
  1. Brazil  Carlos Romão
  2. Germany  Mark Ziegner
  3. Argentina  Diego Ostrovich
  4. United States  Dave Humpherys
  5. Malaysia  Sim Han How
  6. Republic of Ireland  John Larkin
  7. Finland  Tuomas Kotiranta
  8. United States  Ken Krouner
Team final
  1. Germany  Germany – Kai Budde, Mark Ziegner, Felix Schneiders
  2. United States  United States – Eugene Harvey, Andrew Ranks, Eric Franz
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Germany  Kai Budde
  2. Sweden  Jens Thorén
  3. United States  Alex Shvartsman
Rookie of the Year
  1. France  Farid Meraghni

2003 World championship

edit
Daniel Zink – 2003 World Championship
Wake
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Mana Leak
1 Circular Logic
4 Wrath of God
2 Vengeful Dreams
3 Moment's Peace
3 Renewed Faith
3 Mirari's Wake
1 Mirari
4 Deep Analysis
3 Compulsion
3 Cunning Wish
2 Decree of Justice

4 Krosan Verge
4 Skycloud Expanse
4 Forest
4 Plains
7 Island
2 Flooded Strand
2 Elfhame Palace

1 Vengeful Dreams
1 Hunting Pack
1 Wing Shards
1 Circular Logic
1 Ray of Distortion
1 Renewed Faith
1 Krosan Reclamation
2 Exalted Angel
3 Ray of Revelation
3 Anurid Brushhopper

(Complete coverage)

The tenth Magic World Championship was held from 6 to 10 August at the Estrel Hotel in Berlin, Germany.[25] The tournament featured Onslaught-Legions-Scourge Rochester Draft, Extended, and Standard as individual formats and Onslaught Team Rochester Draft as the team format.[29]

312 players from 54 countries participated in the tournament. German Daniel Zink managed to emerge as the new world champion, beating Japan's Jin Okamoto 3–0 in the finals and taking home $35,000 in the process. The total prize money awarded to the top 64 finishers was $208,130.[29] In the team final the United States defeated Finland 2–1.[29]

Finishing order
  1. Germany  Daniel Zink
  2. Japan  Jin Okamoto
  3. Finland  Tuomo Nieminen
  4. United States  Dave Humpherys
  5. Netherlands  Jeroen Remie
  6. Germany  Peer Kröger
  7. Germany  Wolfgang Eder
  8. United States  Gabe Walls
Team Finals
  1. United States  United States – Justin Gary, Gabe Walls, Joshua Wagner
  2. Finland  Finland – Tomi Walamies, Tuomo Nieminen, Arho Toikka

Player of the Year Race

  1. Germany  Kai Budde
  2. United States  Justin Gary
  3. Sweden  Mattias Jorstedt
Rookie of the Year
Japan  Masashi Oiso

2004 World championship

edit
Julien Nuijten – 2004 World Championship
W/G Astral Slide
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Viridian Shaman
4 Eternal Witness
4 Eternal Dragon

4 Wrath of God
4 Renewed Faith
4 Astral Slide
2 Akroma's Vengeance
2 Decree of Justice
1 Plow Under
2 Wing Shards
4 Rampant Growth

4 Secluded Steppe
4 Tranquil Thicket
4 Windswept Heath
6 Plains
7 Forest

4 Oxidize
2 Rude Awakening
3 Scrabbling Claws
3 Circle of Protection: Red
3 Plow Under

(Complete coverage)

The eleventh Magic World Championship was held from 1 to 5 September at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco, California, USA.[30] The tournament featured Standard on Wednesday, Mirrodin-Darksteel-Fifth Dawn Booster Draft on Thursday, and Mirrodin Block Constructed on Friday. The team format was Mirrodin Block Team Rochester Draft.[31]

304 players from 51 countries competed in the event. This was the first ever World Championships without a player from the United States in the Top 8. Julien Nuijten won the final 3–1 against Aeo Paquette. At 15 years old, he became the youngest ever Pro Tour winner and took home a total of $52,366 – a new record for winnings in a single collectible card game tournament. The total prize money awarded to the top 64 finishers was $208,130. Team Germany won the team final 2–1 against Belgium.[30]

Finishing order
  1. Netherlands  Julien Nuijten
  2. Canada  Aeo Paquette
  3. Japan  Ryou Ogura
  4. France  Manuel Bevand
  5. Netherlands  Kamiel Cornelissen
  6. Malaysia  Terry Soh
  7. France  Gabriel Nassif
  8. Canada  Murray Evans
Team final
  1. Germany  Germany – Torben Twiefel, Roland Bode, Sebastian Zink
  2. Belgium  Belgium – Vincent Lemoine, Dilson Ramos Da Fonseca, Geoffrey Siron
Player of the Year Race
  1. France  Gabriel Nassif
  2. Norway  Nicolai Herzog
  3. Norway  Rickard Österberg
Rookie of the Year
Netherlands  Julien Nuijten

2005 World championship

edit

(Complete coverage)

Katsuhiro Mori – 2005 World Championship
Ghazi Glare
Main Deck: Sideboard:

2 Yosei, The Morning Star
3 Arashi the Sky Asunder
1 Birds of Paradise
4 Selesnya Guildmage
4 Wood Elves
4 Loxodon Hierarch
3 Kodama of the North Tree
3 Llanowar Elves

3 Pithing Needle
3 Umezawa's Jitte
2 Congregation at Dawn
3 Glare of Subdual
2 Seed Spark

4 Vitu-Ghazi, The City Tree
4 Selesnya Sanctuary
1 Okina, Temple to the Grandfathers
4 Brushland
5 Forest
4 Temple Garden
1 Plains

2 Greater Good
1 Kodama of the North Tree
2 Naturalize
2 Carven Caryatid
1 Seedborn Muse
1 Wrath of God
1 Kodama's Reach
2 Yosei, the Morning Star
3 Hokori, Dust Drinker

The twelfth Magic World Championship was held from 30 November to 4 December at the Pacifico Yokohama in Yokohama, Japan. The tournament featured Standard on Wednesday, Ravnica Booster Draft on Thursday, and Extended on Friday. The team format was Ravnica Team Rochester Draft.[32] The event began with the induction of the first class of the newly incepted Hall of Fame – Alan Comer, Jon Finkel, Tommi Hovi, Darwin Kastle, and Olle Råde.[33]

287 players from 56 countries competed in the event. Katsuhiro Mori won the tournament, defeating Frank Karsten 3–1 in the final, taking home $35,000. The total prize money awarded to the top 64 finishers was $208,130. In the team final Japan defeated the United States 3–0.[32]

Finishing Order
  1. Japan  Katsuhiro Mori
  2. Netherlands  Frank Karsten
  3. Japan  Tomohiro Kaji
  4. Japan  Akira Asahara
  5. Portugal  Marcio Carvalho
  6. Singapore  Ding Leong
  7. Japan  Shuhei Nakamura
  8. Portugal  André Coimbra
Team final
  1. Japan  Japan – Takuma Morofuji, Ichirou Shimura, Masashi Oiso
  2. United States  United States – Antonino De Rosa, Neil Reeves, Jonathan Sonne
Player of the Year Race
  1. Japan  Kenji Tsumura
  2. France  Olivier Ruel
  3. Japan  Masashi Oiso
Rookie of the Year
  1. France  Pierre Canali
Hall of Fame inductees

2006 World championship

edit

(Complete Coverage)

Makihito Mihara – 2006 World Championship
Dragonstorm
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Bogardan Hellkite
2 Hunted Dragon

4 Dragonstorm
4 Lotus Bloom
4 Telling Time
4 Seething Song
4 Sleight of Hand
4 Rite of Flame
4 Gigadrowse
4 Remand

1 Dreadship Reef
1 Calciform Pools
8 Island
4 Steam Vents
4 Mountain
4 Shivan Reef

1 Trickbind
3 Pyroclasm
1 Calciform Pools
2 Dreadship Reef
3 Ignorant Bliss
4 Repeal
1 Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir

The thirteenth Magic World Championship took place from 29 November – 3 December 2006 at the Carrousel du Louvre in Paris, France. The tournament featured Standard on Wednesday, Time Spiral Booster Draft on Thursday, and Extended on Friday. The team format was Time Spiral Team Rochester Draft.[34] Also on Wednesday Bob Maher, Dave Humpherys, Raphaël Lévy, Gary Wise, and Rob Dougherty were inducted into the Hall of Fame.

The winner of this tournament was Makihito Mihara, who defeated Ryou Ogura 3–0 in an all-Japanese final. He piloted a combo deck based on the card Dragonstorm. It is the first time players from the same country have been World Champion in back-to-back seasons. The Netherlands defeated Japan 2–0 in the team final. The total prize money awarded to the top 75 finishers was $255,245.[35]

Finishing Order
  1. Japan  Makihito Mihara
  2. Japan  Ryou Ogura
  3. Wales  Nicholas Lovett
  4. France  Gabriel Nassif
  5. Portugal  Paulo Carvalho
  6. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
  7. Portugal  Tiago Chan
  8. Japan  Katsuhiro Mori
Team final
  1. Netherlands  Netherlands – Kamiel Cornelissen, Julien Nuijten, Robert Van Medevoort
  2. Japan  Japan – Katsuhiro Mori, Shuhei Yamamoto, Hidenori Katayama
Player of the Year
  1. Japan  Shouta Yasooka
  2. Japan  Shuhei Nakamura
  3. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
Rookie of the Year
  1. Germany  Sebastian Thaler
Hall of Fame inductees

2007 World championship

edit

(Complete Coverage)

Uri Peleg – 2007 World Championship
Doran Rock
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Birds of Paradise
4 Doran, the Siege Tower
1 Hypnotic Specter
3 Llanowar Elves
4 Ohran Viper
3 Shriekmaw
4 Tarmogoyf

2 Eyeblight's Ending
3 Garruk Wildspeaker
1 Liliana Vess
2 Nameless Inversion
2 Profane Command
4 Thoughtseize

1 Brushland
3 Caves of Koilos
1 Forest
2 Gemstone Mine
4 Gilt-Leaf Palace
1 Horizon Canopy
4 Llanowar Wastes
1 Pendelhaven
4 Treetop Village
2 Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth

2 Cloudthresher
2 Loxodon Warhammer
2 Nath of the Gilt-Leaf
1 Oblivion Ring
3 Riftsweeper
2 Serrated Arrows
1 Shriekmaw
2 Stupor

The fourteenth Magic World Championship took place from 6–9 December 2007 at the Jacob K. Javits Center of New York in New York City, USA. The tournament featured five rounds of Standard and a Lorwyn Booster Draft on Thursday. Friday featured five rounds of Legacy and another Lorwyn Booster Draft. The team format was Lorwyn Two-Headed Giant Booster Draft.[36] The top 64 individual finishers received $215,600 in prize money.

386 players from 61 countries competed in the event. The winner of the tournament was Uri Peleg, defeating Patrick Chapin 3–1 in the final. Katsuhiro Mori made the top 8 for the third consecutive year, while Gabriel Nassif made his third final eight within four Worlds. Coincidentally, each player mirrored their performance from the previous year (Mori was eliminated in the quarter-finals, Nassif in the semi-finals).[37]

Finishing Order
  1. Israel  Uri Peleg
  2. United States  Patrick Chapin
  3. France  Gabriel Nassif
  4. Japan  Koutarou Ootsuka
  5. Switzerland  Cristoph Huber
  6. Japan  Yoshitaka Nakano
  7. Japan  Katsuhiro Mori
  8. Netherlands  Roel van Heeswijk
Team final
  1. Switzerland  Switzerland – Nico Bohny, Manuel Bucher, Christoph Huber, Raphael Gennari
  2. Austria  Austria – Thomas Preyer, David Reitbauer, Stefan Stradner, Helmut Summersberger
Pro Tour Player of the Year
  1. Japan  Tomoharu Saitou
  2. Japan  Kenji Tsumura
  3. France  Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
Rookie of the Year
  1. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe
Hall of Fame inductees

2008 World championship

edit
Antti Malin – 2008 World Championship
Faeries
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Mistbind Clique
2 Sower of Temptation
4 Spellstutter Sprite
2 Vendilion Clique

4 Agony Warp
4 Bitterblossom
3 Broken Ambitions
4 Cryptic Command
3 Remove Soul
1 Terror
4 Thoughtseize

1 Faerie Conclave
6 Island
4 Mutavault
4 Secluded Glen
4 Sunken Ruins
2 Swamp
4 Underground River

4 Flashfreeze
2 Glen Elendra Archmage
4 Infest
2 Jace Beleren
1 Mind Shatter
1 Ponder
1 Sower of Temptation

(Official coverage)

The fifteenth Magic World Championship took place from 11 to 14 December 2008 at the Memphis Cook Convention Center in Memphis, TN, USA. The tournament featured six rounds of Standard play on Thursday, two Shards of Alara Booster Drafts with three rounds of Swiss each on Friday, six rounds of Extended on Saturday, and the finals on Sunday. Also, the national teams played two rounds of team constructed each on Thursday and Saturday with the Top 4 teams advancing to the single elimination finals on Sunday. The team format was 3 Person Team Constructed with one player playing Standard, one Extended, and one Legacy.[38] The top 75 individual finishers received $245,245 in prize money.[39]

329 players from 57 countries competed in the event. Antti Malin from Finland won the tournament, thereby claiming the first prize of $45,000. In the team final the United States defeated Australia to become the team champion.

Individual
  1. Finland  Antti Malin
  2. United States  Jamie Parke
  3. Japan  Tsuyoshi Ikeda
  4. Estonia  Hannes Kerem
  5. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
  6. Japan  Kenji Tsumura
  7. Netherlands  Frank Karsten
  8. Japan  Akira Asahara
Team Competition
  1. United States  United States – Michael Jacob, Samuel Black, Paul Cheon
  2. Australia  Australia – Aaron Nicastri, Brandon Lau, Justin Cheung
  3. Brazil  Brazil – Willy Edel, Vagner Casatti, Luiz Guilherme de Michielli
  4. Japan  Japan – Yuuya Watanabe, Masashi Oiso, Akihiro Takakuwa

Pro Player of the Year

Rookie of the Year
  1. Australia  Aaron Nicastri
Hall of Fame inductees

2009 World championship

edit
André Coimbra – 2009 World Championship
Naya Lightsaber
Main Deck: Sideboard:

4 Baneslayer Angel
4 Bloodbraid Elf
4 Noble Hierarch
4 Ranger of Eos
1 Scute Mob
4 Wild Nacatl
4 Woolly Thoctar

3 Ajani Vengeant
4 Lightning Bolt
4 Path to Exile

4 Arid Mesa
4 Forest
3 Mountain
1 Oran-Rief, the Vastwood
4 Plains
4 Rootbound Crag
4 Sunpetal Grove

1 Ajani Vengeant
2 Burst Lightning
4 Celestial Purge
4 Goblin Ruinblaster
4 Great Sable Stag

(Official coverage)

The sixteenth Magic World Championship took place from 19 to 22 November 2009 at the Palazzo Dei Congressi in Rome, Italy. The tournament featured six rounds of Standard play on Thursday, two Zendikar Booster Drafts with three rounds of Swiss each on Friday, six rounds of Extended on Saturday and the finals on Sunday. Also, the national teams played two rounds of team constructed each on Thursday and Saturday with the Top 4 teams advancing to the single elimination finals on Sunday. The team format was 3 Person Team Constructed with one player playing Standard, one Extended, and one Legacy.

409 players from 65 countries competed in the event. André Coimbra from Portugal won the tournament, thereby claiming the first prize of $45,000. In the team final, China defeated Austria to become the team champion. This was the first Magic Pro Tour event of any sort in which no player in the Top 8 was from the United States or Japan. It was also the first time a Pro Tour Top 8 consisted of players from eight countries.

The Magic Online World Championship was held for the first time. It also took place in Rome at the site of the paper Magic World Championship. The tournament was previously announced to be for eight competitors. The qualifications could be gained in special tournaments on Magic Online. The players played three rounds each of Classic, Zendikar Booster Draft, and Standard on computers provided on the site. After nine rounds the two best players determined the title in a final match of Standard.[40] Anssi Myllymäki (screen name: Anathik) of Finland defeated former Pro Player of the Year Shouta Yasooka (yaya3) in the final, thus claiming the grand prize of $13,000.[41] The other contestants won between $4,000 and $9,000.[40]

Individual
  1. Portugal  André Coimbra
  2. Austria  David Reitbauer
  3. Malaysia  Terry Soh
  4. Netherlands  Bram Snepvangers
  5. Italy  William Cavaglieri
  6. Switzerland  Manuel Bucher
  7. Belgium  Marijn Lybaert
  8. Germany  Florian Pils
Team Competition
  1. China  China – Bo Li, Wu Tong, Zhiyang Zhang
  2. Austria  Austria – Benedikt Klauser, Bernhard Lehner, Benjamin Rozhon
  3. Czech Republic  Czech Republic – Lukas Blohon, Lukas Jakolvsky, Jan Kotrla
  4. Netherlands  Netherlands – Kevin Grove, Niels Noorlander, Tom van Lamoen

Pro Player of the Year

Rookie of the Year
  1. Germany  Lino Burgold
Hall of Fame inductees
Magic Online World Champion
  • Finland  Anssi Myllymäki

2010 World championship

edit
Guillaume Matignon – 2010 World Championship
Blue-Black Control
Main Deck: Sideboard:

3 Grave Titan
2 Sea Gate Oracle

1 Cancel
2 Consume the Meek
2 Disfigure
2 Doom Blade
1 Duress
3 Inquisition of Kozilek
2 Jace Beleren
4 Jace, the Mind Sculptor
4 Mana Leak
4 Preordain
4 Spreading Seas

4 Creeping Tar Pit
4 Darkslick Shores
4 Drowned Catacomb
5 Island
1 Misty Rainforest
3 Swamp
4 Tectonic Edge
1 Verdant Catacombs

1 Deprive
2 Disfigure
1 Doom Blade
2 Duress
2 Flashfreeze
3 Memoricide
3 Ratchet Bomb
1 Sorin Markov

(Official coverage)

The seventeenth Magic World Championship took place from 9–12 December in Makuhari Messe in Chiba, Japan.[42] The tournament consisted of six rounds of Standard on Thursday, two Scars of Mirrodin Booster Drafts of three rounds each on Friday, and six rounds of Extended on Saturday. On Sunday the best eight players gathered for the Top 8. They had to play the same decks, they used in the Standard portion of the tournament. Also, the national teams played two rounds of team constructed each on Thursday and Saturday with the Top 2 teams advancing to the single elimination finals on Sunday. The team format is 3 Person Team Constructed with one player playing Standard, one Extended, and one Legacy.

352 players from 60 countries competed in the event.[43] The national teams competition had 57 countries represented.

The 2010 World Champion Guillaume Matignon earned enough pro points with his performance to equal Pro Player of the Year leader Brad Nelson's total. This led to a play-off for the Pro Player of the Year title at Pro Tour Paris 2011, which was ultimately won by Brad Nelson.

Individual
  1. France  Guillaume Matignon
  2. France  Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
  3. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
  4. Sweden  Love Janse
  5. United States  Eric Froehlich
  6. Czech Republic  Lukas Jaklovsky
  7. Austria  Christopher Wolf
  8. England  Jonathan Randle
Team Competition
  1. Slovakia  Slovakia – Ivan Floch, Robert Jurkovic, Patrik Surab
  2. Australia  Australia – Adam Witton, Ian Wood, Jeremy Neeman

Pro Player of the Year

Rookie of the Year
  1. Italy  Andrea Giarola
Hall of Fame inductees
Magic Online World Champion

2011 World championship

edit
Jun'ya Iyanaga – 2011 World Championship
Wolf Run Ramp
Main Deck: Sideboard:

1 Birds of Paradise
4 Inferno Titan
4 Primeval Titan
4 Solemn Simulacrum
1 Thrun, the Last Troll

2 Devil's Play
4 Galvanic Blast
2 Green Sun's Zenith
4 Rampant Growth
1 Shock
3 Slagstorm
4 Sphere of the Suns

4 Copperline Gorge
5 Forest
4 Inkmoth Nexus[dead link]
3 Kessig Wolf Run
6 Mountain
4 Rootbound Crag

2 Ancient Grudge
4 Autumn's Veil
1 Beast Within
1 Slagstorm
2 Sword of Feast and Famine
2 Thrun, the Last Troll
2 Tree of Redemption
1 Viridian Corrupter

(Official coverage)

The eighteenth Magic World Championship was held from 17 to 20 November in the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco,[44] the same site that already hosted the 2004 World Championship. The tournament consisted of six rounds of Standard on Thursday, two Innistrad Booster Drafts of three rounds each on Friday, and six rounds of Modern on Saturday. This would be the first World Championship to feature the new Modern format. On Sunday, the Top 8 players played against each other in elimination rounds, using the Standard decks they played on Thursday. 375 players from 60 countries competed in the event.[45]

The Swiss rounds were dominated by American player Conley Woods, who would go 16–2 with his only losses being tactical concessions to other ChannelFireball teammates. Ultimately, four ChannelFireball teammates would make it into the Top 8: Conley Woods, Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa, Luis Scott-Vargas and Josh Utter-Leyton. For Paulo this was his fourth World Championship Top 8, making him the first player to achieve this, and his eighth Pro Tour Top 8 overall. Also, for the first time players playing in the Magic Online World Championships managed to make the Top 8 of the Pro Tour, with Jun'ya Iyanaga (SEVERUS on MTGO) and David Caplan (goobafish on MTGO) making it to Sunday. The quarterfinals saw three of the four ChannelFireball teammates eliminated, with only Conley Woods making it to the semifinals after narrowly defeating Craig Wescoe 3–2. The semifinals were clean sweeps with Jun'ya Iyanaga and Richard Bland defeating Conley Woods and David Caplan 3–0 respectively. In the finals Jun'ya Iyanaga defeated Richard Bland in another 3–0 to become the 2011 World Champion. Jun'ya Iyanaga's prize money for winning the World Championship and placing seventh in the Magic Online World Championship was $51,000, making him the second highest earner in the history of the World Championships behind 2004 World Champion Julien Nuijten.[46]

In the team event, Japan played against Norway for the World Team Title. The Japanese team of Ryuichiro Ishida, Tomoya Fujimoto, and former World Champion Makihito Mihara were victorious.

In the Magic Online World Championship finals, Reid Duke (reidderrabbit on MTGO) played against Florian Pils (flying man on MTGO) in the Modern format. Reid Duke won the match 2–1 to become the Magic Online World Champion, the first American and the first Magic Online Player of the Year to win the title.

Individual
  1. Japan  Jun'ya Iyanaga
  2. England  Richard Bland
  3. United States  Conley Woods
  4. Canada  David Caplan
  5. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
  6. United States  Luis Scott-Vargas
  7. United States  Josh Utter-Leyton
  8. United States  Craig Wescoe
Team Competition
  1. Japan  Japan – Ryuichiro Ishida, Tomoya Fujimoto, Makihito Mihara
  2. Norway  Norway – Sveinung Bjørnerud, Kristoffer Jonassen, Andreas Nordahl
Pro Player of the Year
  1. United States  Owen Turtenwald
  2. United States  Luis Scott-Vargas
  3. Czech Republic  Martin Juza
Rookie of the Year
  1. United States  Matthias Hunt
Hall of Fame inductees
Magic Online World Champion

2012 World championship

edit

In 2012, the Magic World Championship structure was drastically altered alongside changes to the ranking system used in Magic: The Gathering. The individual World Championship was changed from a Pro Tour-sized event to a sixteen-player event, which was called the Magic Players Championship (though the tournament reverted to being called the World Championship for 2013). The team event, formerly held alongside the individual event, took place before the individual tournament and was contested by four-player teams instead of the previous three-player teams.

2012 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official coverage)

Mode

edit

The first World Magic Cup was held on 16–19 August at Gen Con 2012 in Indianapolis.[3] The World Magic Cup is a modified national team event contested by four-player teams. Of the four players, three were winners of a country's three qualifier tournaments, called Magic World Cup qualifiers. The final player on the team was the National Champion, the player with the most pro points for the season from that country.

On Day 1, there were seven Swiss rounds including three rounds of Magic 2013 Booster Draft and four rounds of Standard.[47] Players gained points for the team (Win- 3, Draw- 1, Loss- 0) and the best three scores in each team were added together to make a combined team score. The Top 32 teams with the highest combined team score advanced to Day 2.[47]

On Day 2, all qualified teams will only start with three players, along with their advisor (the lowest scoring player in their team on Day 1).[47] The 32 teams were being sorted, according to seeding, into eight pools of four teams. The teams played in three rounds with the format being Magic 2013 Team Sealed Deck. After these rounds, the top two teams from each pool advanced to the second stage, leaving sixteen teams. These teams were then sorted into four pools of four teams, and played three rounds of Team Constructed, with a player from each team playing Standard, Modern, and Innistrad Block Constructed.[47]

On Day 3, the top eight teams from Day 2 competed in seeded single-elimination rounds, in the Team Constructed format, to determine the winner of the World Magic Cup.[47]

Results

edit

In the final of the tournament, the team from Taiwan played against the Puerto Rico team. Taiwan won the final and became the first World Magic Cup holders.[48]

Finalists[49]
  1. Taiwan  Taiwan — Tzu-Ching Kuo, Tung-Yi Cheng, Yu Min Yang, and Paul Renie
  2. Puerto Rico  Puerto Rico – Jorge Iramain, Gabriel Nieves, Cesar Soto, and Jonathan Paez
  3. Poland  Poland – Tomek Pedrakowski, Mateusz Kopec, Adam Bubacz, and Jan Pruchniewicz
  4. Hungary  Hungary – Tamás Glied, Gabor Kocsis, Tamas Nagy, and Máté Schrick
  5. Croatia  Croatia – Grgur Petric Maretic, Toni Portolan, Stjepan Sucic, and Goran Elez
  6. Scotland  Scotland – Stephen Murray, Bradley Barclay, Andrew Morrison, and Chris Davie
  7. Philippines  Philippines – Andrew Cantillana, Gerald Camangon, Zax Ozaki, and Jeremy Bryan Domocmat
  8. Slovakia  Slovak Republic – Robert Jurkovic, Ivan Floch, Filip Valis, and Patrik Surab

2012 Magic Players Championship

edit

(Official coverage)

Mode

edit

The 2012 Magic: The Gathering Players Championship was held from 29 to 31 August 2012 at the PAX Prime 2012 event.[50] It replaced the former Pro Tour-sized World Championship event. Although originally entitled the 2012 World Championship, the tournament was renamed the Players Championship in an announcement in December 2011.[3] The Players Championship also replaced the former Pro Player of the Year title, with that title intended to be encompassed in the Players Championship. The 2012 Magic Players Championship was an exclusive sixteen-person tournament[51] which took place over three days. Day 1 consisted of three rounds of the Modern format followed by three rounds of Cube Draft, the first time a Cube Draft had been used in high-level competition.[50] Day 2 consisted of three rounds of Magic 2013 draft, followed by three more rounds of Modern. On Day 3, the four players with the best records from the past 12 rounds played in single-elimination best-of-five-games Modern rounds to determine the winner of the Magic Players Championship.

Results

edit

Yuuya Watanabe won the 2012 Players Championship and became only the second player ever (after Kai Budde) to receive more than one Player of the Year title.[52]

  1. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (Top Pro Points, Japan) - Decklist
  2. Japan  Shouta Yasooka (Top Pro Points, At-large 3)
  3. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (Top Pro Points, Latin America)
  4. United States  Jon Finkel (Top Pro Points, At-large 1)
  5. Japan  Shuhei Nakamura (Top Pro Points, At-large 5)
  6. United States  Brian Kibler (Pro Tour Dark Ascension Champion)
  7. Italy  Samuele Estratti (Pro Tour Philadelphia Champion)
  8. Canada  Alexander Hayne (Pro Tour Avacyn Restored Champion)
  9. Czech Republic  Martin Juza (Top Pro Points, Europe)
  10. United States  Owen Turtenwald (2011 Pro Tour Player of the Year)
  11. Japan  Jun'ya Iyanaga (2011 World Champion)
  12. United States  Luis Scott-Vargas (Top Pro Points, At-large 2)
  13. United States  Josh Utter-Leyton (Top Pro Points, North America)
  14. United States  David Ochoa (Top Pro Points, At-large 4)
  15. Taiwan  Tzu-Ching Kuo (Top Pro Points, APAC)
  16. United States  Reid Duke (2011 Magic Online Champion)

2013 World Championship

edit

(Official coverage)

For 2013 the Players Championship was renamed to World Championship. The title of Pro Player of the Year once again became a separate title, being awarded to Josh Utter-Leyton for the 2012-13 season. The 2013 World Championship was held in Amsterdam on 31 July – 4 August.[53]

The players invited to the 2013 World Championship were.[54]

  1. Israel  Shahar Shenhar (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  2. United States  Reid Duke (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  3. United States  Ben Stark (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  4. United States  Josh Utter-Leyton (2012–13 Player of the year)
  5. United States  Craig Wescoe (Pro Tour Dragon's Maze winner)
  6. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (2012 Players Championship winner)
  7. United States  Brian Kibler (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  8. Japan  Shuhei Nakamura (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  9. Russia  Dmitriy Butakov (2012 Magic Online champion)
  10. United States  David Ochoa (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  11. Czech Republic  Stanislav Cifka (Pro Tour Return to Ravnica winner)
  12. United States  Tom Martell (Pro Tour Gatecrash winner)
  13. Brazil  Willy Edel (Top Pro Points, Latin America)
  14. United States  Eric Froehlich (Top Pro Points, at-large)
  15. Hong Kong  Lee Shi Tian (Top Pro Points, Asia Pacific)
  16. Czech Republic  Martin Juza (Top Pro Points, at-large)

The tournament consisted of three rounds each of Modern Masters Booster Draft, Modern, Magic 2014 Booster Draft, and Standard. After these twelve rounds, the field of 16 players was cut to the top four. In the semi-finals Shahar Shenhar beat Ben Stark, and Reid Duke beat Josh Utter-Leyton. After trailing 0–2 in the finals, Shahar Shenhar came back to a 3–2 victory over Reid Duke with his UWR Flash Modern Deck, thus becoming the 2013 Magic World Champion.

2013 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official coverage)

The second World Magic Cup took place during 2–4 August 2013 at the Amsterdam Convention Factory, in conjunction with the World Championship.

In the finals of the tournament, France won 2–1 against Hungary.

Mode

edit

The format greatly differs from the inaugural running: Day 1 would still consist of seven Swiss rounds will decide the 32 teams advance to Day 2, but three rounds of Team Sealed Deck and four rounds of Team Standard were played instead. On Day 2, the team play began with teams being sorted, according to seeding, into eight pools of four teams. The teams played in three rounds with the format being Team Sealed Deck. After these rounds, the top two teams from each pool advanced to the second stage, leaving sixteen teams. These teams were then sorted into four pools of four teams, and played three rounds of Team Standard. The Top 8 teams, advanced the top two teams from each pool, will play Team Standard on the final day of the tournament in seeded single-elimination rounds.

On Day 1 and Day 2, Teams must switch one of the members played in the first portion to the player who had not played in the first portion at the beginning of the second portion of the event (i.e. no player can sit out for the whole day). In Team Standard, the same decks must be used throughout the whole event.

Final eight[55]
  1. France  France (Raphaël Lévy, Timothee Simonot, Yann Guthmann, and Stephane Soubrier)
  2. Hungary  Hungary (Tamas Nagy, Adorjan Korbl, Gabor Kocsis, and Ervin Hosszú)
  3. Czech Republic  Czech Republic (Stanislav Cifka, Leos Kopecky, Kristian Janda, and Michal Mendl)
  4. Iceland  Iceland (Alvin Orri Gislason, Orri Ómarsson, Ragnar Sigurdsson and Hedinn Haraldsson)
  5. Austria  Austria (Thomas Holzinger, Manuel Danninger, David Reitbauer, and Marc Mühlböck)
  6. Estonia  Estonia (Hannes Kerem, Mikk Kaasik, Rauno Raidma, and Simon Robberts)
  7. New Zealand  New Zealand (Walker MacMurdo, Jingwei Zheng, Jason Chung, and Digby Carter)
  8. Belgium  Belgium (Vincent Lemoine, Xavier Vantyghem, Marijn Lybaert, and Emmanuel Delvigne)

2014 World Championship

edit

(Official coverage)

In 2014, the World Championship and the World Magic Cup took place from 2–7 December 2014. The events were held in conjunction in Nice, France.

For 2014, the World Championship format was altered to include 24 players rather than the 16 players who were invited the previous two years. Day One of the tournament consisted of three rounds of Vintage Masters Draft and four rounds of Modern. Day Two consisted of three rounds of Khans of Tarkir Draft and four rounds of Standard. After these fourteen rounds the Top 4 players in the Swiss standings played in single-elimination rounds in the Standard format.[56]

The final standings were as follows:

  1. Israel  Shahar Shenhar (2013 World Champion) - Decklist
  2. United States  Patrick Chapin (Pro Tour Journey into Nyx winner)
  3. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (Pro Point leader Japan)
  4. Japan  Kentaro Yamamoto (8th most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  5. Canada  Shaun McLaren (Pro Tour Born of the Gods winner)
  6. Japan  Yuuki Ichikawa (Pro Point runner-up Japan)
  7. Slovakia  Ivan Floch (Pro Tour Magic 2015 winner)
  8. United States  William Jensen (Most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  9. United States  Sam Black (6th most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  10. Thailand  Lars Dam (2013 Magic Online Champion)
  11. United States  Josh Utter-Leyton (3rd most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  12. United States  Paul Rietzl (5th most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  13. United States  Owen Turtenwald (Pro Point leader North America)
  14. United States  Reid Duke (Pro Point runner-up North America)
  15. Czech Republic  Stanislav Cifka (2nd most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  16. United States  Tom Martell (4th most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  17. France  Raphaël Lévy (2013 World Magic Cup winner)
  18. France  Jérémy Dezani (2013–14 Player of the Year)
  19. Canada  Jacob Wilson (7th most Pro Points of otherwise unqualified)
  20. Brazil  Willy Edel (Pro Point leader Latin America)
  21. South Korea  Nam Sung-Wook (Pro Point runner-up APAC region)
  22. United States  Raymond Perez Jr. (2013–14 Rookie of the Year)
  23. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (Pro Point runner-up Latin America)
  24. Hong Kong  Lee Shi Tian (Pro Point leader APAC region)

Shahar Shenhar became the first player to win the World Championship for a second time as well as the first player to win the title in consecutive years.

2014 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official Coverage)

Final eight[57]
  1. Denmark  Denmark (Martin Müller, Simon Nielsen, Thomas Enevoldsen, Lars Birch)
  2. Greece  Greece (Marios Angelopoulos, Bill Chronopoulos, Panagiotis Savvidis, Socrates Rozakeas)
  3. England  England (Fabrizio Anteri, David Inglis, Francesco Giorgio, Riccardo Reale)
  4. United States  United States (Owen Turtenwald, Isaac Sears, Andrew Baeckstrom, Neal Oliver)
  5. South Korea  South Korea (Nam Sung-wook, Oh Joon-hyun, Cho Jeong-woo, Kim Sang-eun)
  6. Serbia  Serbia (Aleksa Telarov, Miodrag Kitanovic, Boris Bajgo, Milos Stajic)
  7. Slovakia  Slovakia (Ivan Floch, Jan Tomcani, Michal Guldan, Matej Zatlkaj)
  8. Brazil  Brazil (Willy Edel, Gabriel Fehr, Thiago Saporito, Matheus Rosseto)

2015 World Championship

edit

The 2015 World Championship took place from 27 to 30 August 2015. The event was originally planned to be held in Barcelona, Spain in conjunction with 2015 World Magic Cup, but was later moved to Seattle, and was held in conjunction with PAX Prime instead.[4]

Some changes to the previous years' invitation structure were announced, with the following announcement by Director of Organized Play, Helene Bergeot at Pro Tour Fate Reforged.

  • The 2015 World Championship was the last where the World Magic Cup team-winning captain was invited to
  • North America now invited its top four Pro Point earners (it was previously two)
  • Europe now invited its top three Pro Point earners (it was previously two)
  • Asia-Pacific now invited its top three Pro Point earners (it was previously two for Asia-Pacific and two for Japan, the latter of which was folded into the Asia-Pacific georegion for this event)
  • A new slot was added for the player who had earned the most Pro Points at Grand Prix in the 2014–2015 Premier Play season (the number of GPs that count for this slot is uncapped)
  • The invitation for Rookie of the Year had been removed

The format of the tournament was 3 rounds of Modern Masters 2015 draft followed by 4 rounds of Modern constructed for Thursday. On Friday, a Magic Origins draft followed by 4 rounds of standard and after a hiatus on Saturday, the top 4 playoffs on Sunday.

The final standings were as follows:[58]

  1. United States  Seth Manfield (Top Pro Points at large) Decklist
  2. United States  Owen Turtenwald (Top Pro Points at large)
  3. United States  Paul Rietzl (Top Pro Points at large)
  4. United States  Sam Black (Top Pro Points North America)
  5. Sweden  Magnus Lantto (2014 Magic Online Champion)
  6. Denmark  Martin Müller (2014 World Magic Cup winning team captain)
  7. Canada  Shaun McLaren (Top Pro Points at large)
  8. Brazil  Thiago Saporito (Top Pro Points Latin America)
  9. Czech Republic  Ondrey Strasky (Top Pro Points North America)
  10. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  11. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (Top Pro Points Latin America)
  12. Canada  Jacob Wilson (Top Pro Points at large)
  13. Sweden  Joel Larsson (Pro Tour Magic Origins winner)
  14. Canada  Alexander Hayne (Grand Prix Pro Point leader)
  15. Denmark  Martin Dang (Pro Tour Dragons of Tarkir winner)
  16. United States  Steve Rubin (Top Pro Points at large)
  17. Japan  Kentaro Yamamoto (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  18. United States  Mike Sigrist (2014–15 Player of the Year)
  19. United States  Eric Froehlich (Top Pro Points North America)
  20. Hong Kong  Lee Shi Tian (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  21. United States  Brad Nelson (Top Pro Points North America)
  22. Spain  Antonio Del Moral Leon (Pro Tour Fate Reforged winner)
  23. Israel  Shahar Shenhar (2014 World Champion)
  24. United States  Ari Lax (Pro Tour Khans of Tarkir winner)

2015 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official Coverage)

Final eight[59]
  1. Italy  Italy (Marco Cammilluzzi, Andrea Mengucci, Francesco Bifero and William Pizzi)
  2. Thailand  Thailand (Aekarash Sorakup, Suttipong Popitukgul, Matej Dornik and Chom Pasidparchya)
  3. France  France (Pierre Dagen, Hichem Tedjditi, Fathi Ben Aribi and Arnaud Soumet)
  4. Austria  Austria (Nikolaus Eigner, Christoph Aukenthaler, Valentin Mackl and Sebastian Fiala-Ibitz)
  5. Denmark  Denmark (Christoffer Larsen, Daniel Lind, Martin Müller and Martin Dang)
  6. Guatemala  Guatemala (Fernando José Juárez Oliva, José Andrés Martínez Figueloa, Christopher Andrés Virula Martinez and Wilfredo Bojorquez Castillo)
  7. Scotland  Scotland (Ray Doyle, Stephen Murray, Grant Hislop and Martin Clement)
  8. Japan  Japan (Kenji Tsumura, Ryoichi Tamada, Yuuya Watanabe and Soyo You)

2016 World Championship

edit

The 2016 World Championship was held from 1–4 September in Seattle. The formats used in the competition were Eldritch Moon-Shadows over Innistrad Booster Draft for rounds 1–3, Standard for rounds 4–7, Eldritch Moon-Shadows over Innistrad Booster Draft for rounds 8–10, Modern for rounds 11–14, and Standard for the Top 4.[60]

The final standings were as follows:[61]

  1. United States  Brian Braun-Duin (2015–16 Grand Prix Master)
  2. Portugal  Marcio Carvalho (2015–16 Draft Master)
  3. United States  Oliver Tiu (2015–16 Constructed Master)
  4. Japan  Shota Yasooka (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  5. Czech Republic  Lukas Blohon (Pro Tour Eldritch Moon champion, Top Pro Points Europe)
  6. United States  Luis Scott-Vargas (Outstanding Hall of Famer, Top Pro Points North America)
  7. United States  Jiachen Tao (Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch champion)
  8. United States  Seth Manfield (Reigning World Champion, Top Pro Points North America)
  9. Brazil  Thiago Saporito (Top Pro Points Latin America)
  10. United States  Steve Rubin (Pro Tour Shadows over Innistrad champion)
  11. United States  Mike Sigrist (Top Pro Points at large)
  12. United States  Reid Duke (Top Pro Points North America)
  13. United States  Brad Nelson (Top Pro Points at large)
  14. Sweden  Joel Larsson (Top Pro Points Europe)
  15. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (Top Pro Points Latin America)
  16. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  17. United States  Owen Turtenwald (2015–16 Player of the Year, 2015–16 Mid-Season Master, Top Pro Points North America)
  18. Czech Republic  Ondrej Strasky (Top Pro Points at large)
  19. United States  Samuel Pardee (Top Pro Points at large)
  20. Italy  Andrea Mengucci (Top Pro Points at large)
  21. Netherlands  Niels Noorlander (Magic Online Champion)
  22. Japan  Kazuyuki Takimura (Pro Tour Battle for Zendikar champion)
  23. Japan  Ryoichi Tamada (Top Pro Points Asia-Pacific)
  24. Denmark  Martin Müller (Top Pro Points Europe)

2016 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official Coverage)
The 2016 World Magic Cup was held from 18 to 20 November in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

Final eight
  1. Greece  Greece (Panagiotis Papadopoulos, Nikolaos Kaponis, Petros Tziotis, and Bill Chronopoulos)
  2. Belgium  Belgium (Jerome Bastogne, Peter Vieren, Branco Neirynck, and Pascal Vieren)
  3. Italy  Italy (Alessandro Portaro, Andrea Mengucci, Mattia Rizzi, and Alessandro Casamenti)
  4. Belarus  Belarus (Pavel Miadzvedski, Ihar Klionski, Dmitry Andronchik, and Hleb Bantsevich)
  5. Finland  Finland (Lauri Pispa, Tuomas Tuominen, Leo Lahonen, and Matti Kuisma)
  6. Australia  Australia (David Mines, James Wilks, Ryan Cubit, and Garry Lau)
  7. Ukraine  Ukraine (Sergiy Sushalskyy, Bogdan Sorozhinsky, Iurii Babych, and Artem Fedorchenko)
  8. Panama  Panama (Saul Alvarado, Sergio Bonilla, Manuel Succari, and Cesar Segovia)

2017 World Championship

edit

The 2017 World Championship was held from 6–8 October in Boston. For the 2017 World Championship Wizards of the Coast decided to simplify the invitation criteria, awarding a large portion of invites to the players with the most Pro Points in the 2016–17 Pro Tour season. The formats used in the competition were Ixalan Booster Draft for rounds 1–3, Standard for rounds 4–7, Ixalan Booster Draft for rounds 8–10, Standard for rounds 11–14, and Standard for the Top 4.[62]

The final standings were as follows:[63]

  1. United States  William Jensen (Top Pro Point Earner)
  2. Spain  Javier Dominguez (Top Pro Point Earner)
  3. United States  Josh Utter-Leyton (Magic Online Champion)
  4. Singapore  Kelvin Chew (Top Pro Point Earner)
  5. United States  Reid Duke (North American Geo-Region Champion)
  6. United States  Samuel Black (Top Pro Point Earner)
  7. United States  Seth Manfield (Top Pro Point Earner)
  8. United States  Owen Turtenwald (Top Pro Point Earner)
  9. United States  Gerry Thompson (Pro Tour Amonkhet champion)
  10. Japan  Shota Yasooka (Pro Tour Kaladesh champion)
  11. United States  Christian Calcano (Top Pro Point Earner)
  12. Brazil  Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (Pro Tour Hour of Devastation champion, Latin-America Geo Region Champion)
  13. United States  Eric Froehlich (Top Pro Point Earner)
  14. Argentina  Sebastian Pozzo (2016–17 Standard Master)
  15. United States  Brad Nelson (Top Pro Point Earner)
  16. Czech Republic  Martin Juza (2016–17 Draft Master)
  17. Japan  Ken Yukuhiro (Top Pro Point Earner)
  18. Japan  Yuuya Watanabe (Asia-Pacific Geo-Region Champion)
  19. Portugal  Marcio Carvalho (European Geo-Region Champion)
  20. Hong Kong  Lee Shi Tian (Top Pro Point Earner)
  21. Denmark  Martin Müller (Top Pro Point Earner)
  22. United States  Donald Smith (Top Pro Point Earner)
  23. Brazil  Lucas Esper Berthoud (Pro Tour Aether Revolt champion)
  24. United States  Samuel Pardee (Top Pro Point Earner)

2017 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official Coverage)
The 2017 World Magic Cup was held from 1–3 December in Nice, France.

Final eight
  1. Japan  Japan (Yuuya Watanabe, Kenta Harane, and Shota Yasooka)
  2. Poland  Poland (Grzegorz Kowalski, Radek Kaczmarczyk, and Piotr Glogowski)
  3. Germany  Germany (Marc Tobiasch, Philipp Krieger, and Moritz Templin)
  4. Italy  Italy (Andrea Mengucci, Adriano Moscato, and Mattia Rizzi)
  5. Wales  Wales (Philip Griffiths, Sam Rolph, and Aaron Boyhan)
  6. Austria  Austria (Oliver Polak-Rottmann, Elias Klocker, and Adrian Johann Schrenk)
  7. China  China (Yuchen Liu, Chao Lu, and Tan Gao)
  8. Slovakia  Slovakia (Ivan Floch, Peter Snoha, and Ondrej Kedrovic)

2018 World Championship

edit

The 2018 World Championship was held from 21 to 23 September in Las Vegas. The formats used in the competition were Dominaria Booster Draft for rounds 1–3, Standard for rounds 4–7, Dominaria Booster Draft for rounds 8–10, Standard for rounds 11–14, and Standard for the Top 4.[64]

The final standings were as follows:[65]

  1. Spain  Javier Dominguez (Top Pro Point Earner)
  2. Poland  Grzegorz Kowalski (Top Pro Point Earner)
  3. United States  Ben Stark (Top Pro Point Earner)
  4. Israel  Shahar Shenhar (Top Pro Point Earner)
  5. United States  Allen Wu (Pro Tour 25th Anniversary champion)
  6. United States  Wyatt Darby (Pro Tour Dominaria champion)
  7. United States  Matthew Nass (Top Pro Point Earner)
  8. United States  Ben Hull (Pro Tour 25th Anniversary champion)
  9. United States  Reid Duke (Top Pro Point Earner)
  10. United States  Mike Sigrist (Top Pro Point Earner)
  11. United States  John Rolf (Top Pro Point Earner)
  12. Portugal  Marcio Carvalho (European Geo-Region Champion)
  13. United States  Brad Nelson (Top Pro Point Earner)
  14. Sweden  Elias Watsfeldt (2017–18 Draft Master)
  15. United States  Brian Braun-Duin (Top Pro Point Earner)
  16. Argentina  Luis Salvatto (Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan champion, North American Geo-Region Champion)
  17. Italy  Andrea Mengucci (Top Pro Point Earner)
  18. United States  Matthew Severa (2017–18 Constructed Master)
  19. United States  Gregory Orange (Pro Tour 25th Anniversary champion)
  20. United States  Seth Manfield (Pro Tour Ixalan champion, Latin American Geo-Region Champion)
  21. United States  Owen Turtenwald (Top Pro Point Earner)
  22. Czech Republic  Martin Juza (Top Pro Point Earner)
  23. Japan  Ken Yukuhiro (Asia-Pacific Geo-Region Champion)

Gerry Thompson had qualified for the event, but announced very shortly before the start of the tournament, that he was not going to attend in order to protest recent changes to organized play made by Wizards of the Coast. Ken Yukuhiro was disqualified in round 14, sitting in eighth place, for not alerting a judge right away when he noticed that he had failed to de-sideboard after the previous match.[66]

2018 World Magic Cup

edit

(Official Coverage)
The 2018 World Magic Cup was held from 14 to 16 December in Barcelona, Spain.

Final eight
  1. France  France (Jean-Emmanuel Depraz, Arnaud Hocquemiller, and Timothée Jammot)
  2. Israel  Israel (Yuval Zuckerman, Shahar Shenhar, and Amit Etgar)
  3. Hong Kong  Hong Kong (Wu Kon Fai, Lee Shi Tian, and Alexander Dadyko)
  4. Italy  Italy (Tian Fa Mun, Andrea Mengucci, and Mattia Basilico)
  5. Japan  Japan (Ken Yukuhiro, Naoya Nanba, and Moriyama Masahide)
  6. China  China (Liu Yuchen, Song Long, and Xu Ming)
  7. Australia  Australia (Benaya Lie, David Mines, and Matthew Garnham)
  8. Slovakia  Slovakia (Richard Hornansky, Ivan Floch, and Milan Niznansky)

Performance by country

edit

With William "Huey" Jensen's win in 2017 the United States extended its lead over Japan for most Individual World Championships. The United States has also won the most team titles, and have had most competitors amongst the final eight individually. Germany, France, the Netherlands, Brazil and Israel are the only other countries with more than one champion. Canada, Italy and Austria are the most successful nations that have never won a title.

Country Wins Top 8 Team Wins
United States  United States 6 47 8
Japan  Japan 4 24 2
Israel  Israel 3 3 0
France  France 2 12 1
Germany  Germany 2 9 2
Netherlands  Netherlands 2 9 1
Brazil  Brazil 2 8 0
Switzerland  Switzerland 1 3 1
Finland  Finland 1 6 0
Portugal  Portugal 1 5 0
Czech Republic  Czech Republic 1 3 0
Spain  Spain 1 2 0
Australia  Australia 1 1 0
Canada  Canada 0 10 1
Slovakia  Slovakia 0 2 1
China  China 0 0 1
Denmark  Denmark 0 2 1
Austria  Austria 0 5 0
Italy  Italy 0 6 1
Sweden  Sweden 0 4 0
Belgium  Belgium 0 2 0
England  England 0 3 0
Estonia  Estonia 0 1 0
Argentina  Argentina 0 1 0
Norway  Norway 0 1 0
Malaysia  Malaysia 0 3 0
Republic of Ireland  Ireland 0 1 0
Singapore  Singapore 0 1 0
Wales  Wales 0 1 0
Taiwan  Taiwan 0 0 1

As of 5 August 2013

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Rosewater, Mark (1994). "An M:TGer at Gen Con". The Duelist (3). Wizards of the Coast: 39–42. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009.
  2. ^ Helene Bergeot (10 December 2012). "Completing the Premier Play Picture for 2013". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 13 December 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Revamped Premier Play Coming in 2012". Wizards of the Coast. 23 December 2011. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  4. ^ a b c Helene Bergeot (7 February 2015). "2015 World Magic Cup and World Championship Updates". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  5. ^ "2009 World Championship Invitation List". Wizards of the Coast. November 2009. Archived from the original on 14 October 2009. Retrieved 15 November 2008.
  6. ^ "Magic Online 2009 Championship Series". Wizards of the Coast. March 2009. Archived from the original on 13 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  7. ^ "Changes to 2012 Tournament and Event Structure, Part 3". Wizards of the Coast. 2 November 2011. Archived from the original on 5 November 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  8. ^ Magic: The Gathering Premier Event Invitation Policy
  9. ^ David-Marshall, Brian (24 February 2012). "World Magic Cup Runneth Over". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  10. ^ "Vicdan Hasbil, First World Champ". Wizards of the Coast. 14 October 2008. Archived from the original on 17 October 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  11. ^ "1995 World Championship Top 4 Decks". Wizards of the Coast. 16 February 2009. Archived from the original on 19 February 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  12. ^ Rosewater, Mark (16 November 2009). "Around the Worlds in Fifteen Years". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 19 November 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
  13. ^ "Alexander Blume becomes 1995 Magic World Champion". Wizards of the Coast. 1995. Archived from the original on 18 February 2009. Retrieved 16 February 2009.
  14. ^ a b Scott Burke (7 August 1995). "1995 World Championship Results". Newsgrouprec.games.trading-cards.magic.strategy. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  15. ^ Rosewater, Mark (1995). "The Long and Winding Road". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 18 February 2009. Retrieved 16 February 2009.
  16. ^ "Final Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 2003. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h Rosewater, Mark (26 July 2004). "On Tour, Part 1". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 19 October 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  18. ^ a b David J. Low (19 August 1996). "[MtG] Worlds, Day Four..." Newsgroupaus.games. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  19. ^ a b Pearlman, Jeff (17 November 1997). "Revenge of the Nerds". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 87, no. 20. p. 7. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  20. ^ "Pro Tour Results Archive – World Championships, 1997". Wizards of the Coast. 2003. Archived from the original on 30 August 2002. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  21. ^ "ESPN2 to air '97 Magic Worlds". The Duelist. No. 20. Wizards of the Coast. December 1997.
  22. ^ "1998 World Championships Coverage". Wizards of the Coast. 2003. Archived from the original on 10 April 2001. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  23. ^ "1999 Magic: The Gathering World Championships". Wizards of the Coast. 8 August 1999. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  24. ^ "2000 Magic: The Gathering World Championships". Wizards of the Coast. 6 August 2000. Archived from the original on 15 August 2000. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  25. ^ a b c d e Rosewater, Mark (9 August 2004). "On Tour, Part 2". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 2 March 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  26. ^ "2001 World Championships Coverage". Wizards of the Coast. 12 August 2001. Archived from the original on 21 August 2001. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  27. ^ Wachter, Toby (12 August 2001). "Dave Williams Disqualified". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 27 August 2001. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  28. ^ "2002 World Championships Coverage". Wizards of the Coast. 18 August 2001. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  29. ^ a b c "Live Coverage of 2003 World Championships". Wizards of the Coast. 10 August 2001. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  30. ^ a b "Nuijten, Nassif dominate Worlds". Wizards of the Coast. 5 September 2004. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  31. ^ "2004 World Championships". Wizards of the Coast. 1 September 2004. Archived from the original on 2 June 2009. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  32. ^ a b "Worlds 2005: Japan's Crowning Achievement". Wizards of the Coast. 4 December 2005. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  33. ^ "Feature: Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony". Wizards of the Coast. 30 November 2005. Archived from the original on 2 June 2009. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  34. ^ "2006 World Championships Format and Schedule". Wizards of the Coast. 2006. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  35. ^ "Mihara, Dutch crowned World Champions". Wizards of the Coast. 2006. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  36. ^ "2007 Magic Worlds Championships Tournament Format". Wizards of the Coast. 2007. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  37. ^ "Historic Wins for Peleg, Swiss at Worlds". Wizards of the Coast. 9 December 2008. Archived from the original on 5 September 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  38. ^ "2008 Magic Worlds Championships Tournament Format". Wizards of the Coast. 2008. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  39. ^ "Pro Tour". Wizards of the Coast. 2008. Archived from the original on 20 September 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  40. ^ a b Gills, Mike (10 March 2009). "Magic Online 2009 Championship Series". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 13 March 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2010.
  41. ^ "Magic Online Finals: Yaya? Nono!". Wizards of the Coast. 22 November 2009. Archived from the original on 25 November 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2010.
  42. ^ "Magic Span the Globe in 2010". Wizards of the Coast. 11 August 2009. Archived from the original on 14 August 2009. Retrieved 29 November 2009.
  43. ^ "2010 Magic: The Gathering World Championships Country Breakdown". Wizards of the Coast. 8 December 2010. Archived from the original on 16 December 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  44. ^ "Magic Weekend Coming in 2011". Wizards of the Coast. 1 September 2010. Archived from the original on 4 September 2010. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
  45. ^ "2011 Magic: The Gathering World Championships Country Breakdown". Wizards of the Coast. 17 November 2011. Archived from the original on 22 November 2011. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  46. ^ "2011 World Championships: Final Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 20 November 2011. Archived from the original on 23 November 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  47. ^ a b c d e "2012 World Magic Cup". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 27 February 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  48. ^ "Taiwan Claims First World Magic Cup". Wizards of the Coast. 19 August 2012. Archived from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  49. ^ "World Magic Cup 2012 Final Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 18 August 2012. Archived from the original on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  50. ^ a b David-Marshall, Brian (27 April 2012). "Must See TV!". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 4 May 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  51. ^ "2012 Magic Players Championship Competitors". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 23 May 2012. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  52. ^ "Magic Players Championship 2012 Final Standings". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  53. ^ Bergeot, Helene (10 December 2012). "Completing the Premier Play Picture for 2013". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 13 December 2012. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  54. ^ "Magic: The Gathering World Championship -- Competitors". Wizards of the Coast. 19 May 2013. Archived from the original on 9 June 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  55. ^ "World Magic Cup 2013 Top 8 Profiles". Wizards of the Coast. 4 August 2012. Archived from the original on 13 August 2013. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  56. ^ "2014 Magic World Championship Fact Sheet". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  57. ^ "Denmark Overcomes All Odds". Wizards of the Coast. 8 December 2014. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  58. ^ "Final Standings". magic.wizards.com. 28 August 2015. Retrieved 30 October 2015.
  59. ^ "Fantastica Italia!". Wizards of the Coast. 15 December 2015. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  60. ^ "World Championship Preview". magic.wizards.com. 29 August 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  61. ^ "Final Standings". magic.wizards.com. 4 September 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  62. ^ "2017 World Championship Event Information". magic.wizards.com. 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  63. ^ "Final Standings". magic.wizards.com. 8 October 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  64. ^ "2018 World Championship Event Information". magic.wizards.com. 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  65. ^ "Final Standings". magic.wizards.com. 23 September 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  66. ^ "Disqualification in Round 14". magic.wizards.com. 23 November 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
edit