''League of Legends'' Champions Korea
Current season, competition or edition: League of Legends Champions Korea Summer 2017 | |
Sport | League of Legends |
---|---|
Founded | 2012 |
No. of teams | 10 |
Country | South Korea |
Venue(s) | Seoul OGN e-Stadium, Nexon Arena |
Most recent champion(s) | SK Telecom T1 (6th title) |
Most titles | SK Telecom T1 (6 titles) |
TV partner(s) | OGN, SPOTV Games |
Relegation to | Challengers Korea |
Official website | http://program.interest.me/ongamenet/lolchamps |
League of Legends Champions Korea (Hangul: 리그 오브 레전드 챔피언스 코리아), commonly abbreviated as LCK, is the primary competition for League of Legends esports in South Korea. Contested by 10 teams, the league runs two seasons per year and serves as a direct route to qualification for the annual League of Legends World Championship. The LCK is administered in cooperation between Riot Games, KeSPA, OGN, and SPOTV Games.
The league was formerly named League Of Legends Champions before undergoing a major restructuring in late 2014, which saw a change in the competition's format and a rebranding to its current name. OGN reserved exclusive broadcasting rights of the league until 2016 when rights were split with SPOTV Games.[1]
The LCK is widely considered to be the strongest League of Legends competition in the world, with the game's World Championship having been won exclusively by teams from the league since 2013. SK Telecom T1 are the current champions and the most successful team in competition history with six titles.
History
Pre-LCK era (2012-2014)
Following the launch of South Korea's League of Legends server in December 2011, cable broadcaster OnGameNet launched the country's first major League of Legends tournament in March 2012. Named The Champions Spring 2012, the tournament ran from March to May and was contested by a total of 16 teams. MiG Blaze was crowned the competition's inaugural champion after defeating their organizational sibling team MiG Frost in the finals. The Champions Summer 2012 followed later that year, with a rebranded MiG Frost, now known as Azubu Frost, claiming the title themselves. Azubu Frost, along with NaJin Sword, went on to represent South Korea in their first appearance at the League of Legends World Championship in October.
A tri-tournament annual circuit was soon set as the norm for the league's calendar year, now consisting of three seasons held in the winter, spring, and summer. Azubu Frost and NaJin Sword clashed early in 2013 in the finals of Champions Winter 2012-13, with the latter emerging victorious. Champions Spring 2013 and Champions Summer 2013 later followed, being won by MVP Ozone and SK Telecom T1 K respectively. SK Telecom T1 K went on to win the Season 3 World Championship later that year, becoming the first team from the league to do so.
SK Telecom T1 K became the first team to successfully defend their title the following year, sweeping Samsung Galaxy Ozone in the finals of Champions Winter 2013-14 to cap off an undefeated tournament run. Ozone's sibling team, Samsung Galaxy Blue, went on to win Champions Spring 2014 but were bested in the finals of Champions Summer 2014 by KT Rolster Arrows.
In October 2014, plans were announced for a drastic overhaul of the league's structure.[2] League of Legends Champions was rebranded to League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK), and the winter season was abolished in favor of an annual circuit consisting of the Spring Split and Summer Split. The competition's format, which consisted of a 16-team tournament with a group stage progressing into a knockout stage, was changed to a 10-team league operating on a round-robin basis, with the top 5 teams qualifying for a playoffs bracket. Furthermore, organizations were prohibited from owning more than one team - in particular, this change most heavily affected KeSPA-affiliated teams, all of which operated two squads as part of a sibling team system - forcing numerous organizations to merge or disband rosters.
LCK era (2015-present)
LCK Spring 2015 marked the debut of the league operating under its new format and identity. A newly minted SK Telecom T1, a product of the prior year's merger between SK Telecom T1 K and SK Telecom T1 S, swept the calendar year by winning both LCK Spring 2015 and LCK Summer 2015.
SK Telecom T1 retained their crown in LCK Spring 2016, becoming the first team in competition history to win three consecutive titles. Their streak of dominance was ended in LCK Summer 2016 by ROX Tigers, who became only the second team to win the league since its restructuring.
SK Telecom T1 won their sixth title as an organization on 22 April 2017, by defeating KT Rolster in the finals of LCK Spring 2017.
Teams
League of Legends Champions Korea Summer 2017 will feature 10 teams. Ever8 Winners is the newest addition to the league, having secured their promotion into the premier division by defeating Kongdoo Monster on 29 April 2017.
League of Legends Champions Korea Summer 2017
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | Games | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Longzhu Gaming | 18 |
14 |
4 |
31 - 13 |
+18 |
2 |
KT Rolster | 18 |
14 |
4 |
31 - 16 |
+15 |
3 |
Samsung Galaxy | 18 |
13 |
5 |
29 - 15 |
+14 |
4 |
SK Telecom T1 | 18 |
13 |
5 |
26 - 15 |
+11 |
5 |
Afreeca Freecs | 18 |
10 |
8 |
27 - 21 |
+6 |
6 |
Jin Air Green Wings | 18 |
8 |
10 |
21 - 21 |
0 |
7 |
ROX Tigers | 18 |
6 |
12 |
17 - 27 |
-10 |
8 |
MVP | 18 |
6 |
12 |
13 - 29 |
-16 |
9 |
BBQ Olivers | 18 |
3 |
15 |
13 - 32 |
-19 |
10 |
Ever8 Winners | 18 |
3 |
15 |
11 - 30 |
-19 |
References
- ↑ "리그 오브 레전드". www.leagueoflegends.co.kr (in Korean).
- ↑ "Korean Professional League Getting Overhauled". Red Bull.