- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2010
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2010 Pro Tour season Pro Player of the Year Brad Nelson
Rookie of the Year Andrea Giarola
World Champion Guillaume Matignon
Pro Tours 4 Grands Prix 18 Hall of Fame inductions Gabriel Nassif
Brian Kibler
Bram Snepvangers
Start of season 13 February 2010 End of season 12 December 2010 ← 2009 2011 → The 2010 Pro Tour season was the fifteenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. It began on 13 February 2010 with Grand Prix Oakland, and ended on 12 December 2010 with the conclusion of the 2010 World Championship in Chiba, Japan. The season consisted of eighteen Grand Prixs, and four Pro Tours, located in San Diego, San Juan, Amsterdam, and Chiba.[1] Gabriel Nassif, Brian Kibler, and Bram Snepvangers were inducted into the Hall of Fame at the World Championship in Chiba. Although the season formally ended with the conclusion of the World Championship, the final title of season was not awarded until three months later. Guillaume Matignon and Brad Nelson tied for Player of the Year. The title was decided by a single match between the two at the 2011 Pro Tour in Paris, which Nelson won by four games to two.[2]
Mode
Four Pro Tours and eighteen Grand Prixs will be held in the 2010 season. Further Pro Points will be awarded at national championships. These Pro Points will be used mainly to determine the Pro Player club levels of players participating in these events, but also decide which player will be awarded the Pro Player of the year title at the end of the season. Based on final standings Pro Points are awarded as follows:[3]
Rank Pro Points awarded at Pro Tour Grand Prix Nationals Worlds (Team) 1 25 10 10 6 2 20 8 8 5 3–4 16 6 6 4 5–8 12 5 4 3 9–12 8 4 2 2 13–16 8 3 1 1 17–24 7 2 25–32 6 2 33–64 5 1 65–100 4 101–200 3 201+ 2 Grand Prix – Oakland
- GP Oakland (13–14 February)
- Format: Extended
- Attendance: 770
Pro Tour – San Diego (19–21 February 2010)
Pro Tour San Diego was held at the San Diego Convention Center. The tournament began with five rounds of Standard, followed by three rounds of Zendikar-Worldwake Booster Draft on the first day.[1] At the end of day one Gabriel Nassif and Luis Scott-Vargas were the only undefeated players left.[4] The second day began with another Zendikar-Worldwake Booster Draft and was followed by five additional rounds of Standard. Luis Scott-Vargas was the story of the day, having won all his matches in day two as well, thus becoming only the second player to win each match in the swiss portion of a Pro Tour, and the first to achieve this feat over sixteen rounds.
Of the final eight players only Scott-Vargas had ever reached the top eight before.[5] He quickly defeated his dutch opponent. In the remaining quarter-finals the other Americans, Craig Wescoe and Kyle Boggemes, won their matches as well. German Simon Görtzen won the fourth quarter, defeating the Belgian Niels Viaene. In the semi-final Görtzen ended Scott-Vargas's streak, thus making it to the final where he played Boggemes. Both players had chosen Jund (red-green-black) decks. Eventually the German prevailed in a close match over the full five games.[6]
Tournament data
Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 413[7]
Format: Standard, Booster Draft (Zendikar-Worldwake)
Head Judge: Sheldon MeneryTop 8
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals 1 Luis Scott-Vargas 3 8 Jeroen Kanis 0 Luis Scott-Vargas 1 Simon Görtzen 3 4 Simon Görtzen 3 5 Niels Viaene 1 Simon Görtzen 3 Kyle Boggemes 2 2 Daniel Gräfensteiner 1 7 Craig Wescoe 3 Craig Wescoe 1 Kyle Boggemes 3 3 Kyle Boggemes 3 6 Yoshihiko Ikawa 0 Final standings
Pro Player of the year standings
Rank Player Pro Points 1 Simon Görtzen
25 2 Kyle Boggemes
20 3 Luis Scott-Vargas
18 4 Craig Wescoe
16 Grand Prixs – Madrid, Kuala Lumpur, Yokohama, Brussels, Houston, Lyon, Washington D.C.
Pro Tour San Juan (28–30 May 2010)
The second Pro Tour of the season was held in Puerto Rico Convention Center in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The formats were Zendikar Block Constructed and Rise of the Eldrazi Booster Draft with the Top 8 doing another Rise of the Eldrazi draft.[1]
The following players made it to the final draft table (clockwise in order starting at seed one): Guillaume Matignon, Jeremy Neeman, Andrea Giarola, Paulo Vitor da Rosa, Brad Nelson, Noah Swartz, Koutarou Ootsuka, Josh Utter-Leyton. In his fifth individual Top 8 appearance Paulo Vitor da Rosa was finally able to win a quartfinal-match. Winning his semi and the final, too, Paulo eventually claimed the trophy.
Tournament data
Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 396[8]
Format: Booster Draft (Rise of the Eldrazi), Zendikar Block Constructed
Head Judge: Sheldon MeneryTop 8
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals 1 Guillaume Matignon 3 8 Brad Nelson 0 Guillaume Matignon 3 Andrea Giarola 2 4 Andrea Giarola 3 5 Koutarou Ootsuka 2 Guilame Matignon 2 Paulo Vitor da Rosa 3 2 Paulo Vitor da Rosa 3 7 Josh Utter-Leyton 2 Paulo Vitor da Rosa 3 Noah Swartz 1 3 Jeremy Neeman 1 6 Noah Swartz 3 Final standings
Pro Player of the year standings
Rank Player Pro Points 1 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
37 2 Simon Görtzen
31 3 Kyle Boggemes
28 4 Luis Scott-Vargas
26 5 Brad Nelson
25 Tomoharu Saitou
25 Adam Yurchick
25 Grand Prixs – Sendai, Manila, Columbus, Gothenburg
- GP Sendai (June 5–6)
- Format: Standard
- Attendance: 907
Brian Kibler
Makihito Mihara
Shouta Yasooka
Motoaki Itou
Takeshi Ozawa
Yuuya Watanabe
Hiroyuki Shimoya
Ryou Tasaki
- GP Gothenburg (August 28–29)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1001
Kenny Öberg
Anton Jonsson
Marijn Lybaert
Allison Abe
Nicolai Herzog
Sami Häggkvist
Samuel Black
Markku Rikola
- GP Manila (June 12–13)
- Format: Standard
- Attendance: 1071
- GP Columbus (July 31–August 1)
- Format: Legacy
- Attendance: 1296
Pro Tour Amsterdam (3–5 September 2010)
The third Pro Tour of the season was held in Amsterdam Convention Factory in Amsterdam, Netherlands. The formats were Extended and Booster Draft with the Top 8 playing Extended again.[1]
Brad Nelson finished in first place after the swiss rounds, thus continuing his string of Top 8 appearances, he had started at GP Washington in May. Despite losing in the final with his green-white-black Doran-deck, the additional Pro Points were sufficient to make him the leader in the Pro Player of the Year race. Kai Budde had his tenth showing in a Pro Tour Top 8 after six years of absence. He had piloted his Gabriel Nassif-designed White Weenie-deck to a 9–0–1 performance in the Swiss portion of the tournament before losing to Nelson. The eventual winner of the tournament was American Paul Rietzl, playing a White Weenie deck similar to Budde's. Rietzl made a clean sweep of the Top 8 going 9-0, the first time this had ever been done at a Constructed Pro Tour.[9]
Tournament data
Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 457[10]
Format: Extended, Booster Draft
Head Judge: Toby ElliottTop 8
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals 1 Brad Nelson 3 8 Kai Budde 2 Brad Nelson 3 Marijn Lybaert 0 4 Marijn Lybaert 3 5 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa 1 Brad Nelson 0 Paul Rietzl 3 2 Paul Rietzl 3 7 Thomas Ma 0 Paul Rietzl 3 Michael Jacob 0 3 Michael Jacob 3 6 Brian Kibler 2 Final standings
Place Player Prize Pro Points Comment 1 Paul Rietzl
$40,000 25 2nd Final day 2 Brad Nelson
$20,000 20 2nd Final day 3 Michael Jacob
$15,000 16 4 Marijn Lybaert
$13,000 16 4th Final day 5 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
$11,000 12 3rd Final day 6 Brian Kibler
$10,500 12 4th Final day 7 Thomas Ma
$10,000 12 Pro Tour debut 8 Kai Budde
$9,500 12 10th Final day Pro Player of the year standings
Rank Player Pro Points 1 Brad Nelson
54 2 Tomoharu Saitou
44 3 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
41 4 Guillaume Matignon
38 5 Simon Görtzen
37 Marijn Lybaert
Grand Prixs – Portland, Sydney, Toronto, Bochum, Nashville, Florence
- GP Portland (September 11–12)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1371
Martin Juza
Thomas Kiene
Josh Layne
Philip Bau
Jonathan Louks
Nicholas Lynn
David Ochoa
Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
- GP Bochum (October 30–31)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1814
Martin Juza
Yves Sele
Julien Perez
Geertjan Woltjes
Manuel Mayer
Jonas Köstler
Sok-yong Lee
Matthias Künzler
- GP Sydney (October 9–10)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 434
Jeremy Neeman
Luis Scott-Vargas
Jacky Zhang
Isaac Egan
Yuuya Watanabe
Michael Dao
Jarron Puszet
Masayasu Tanahashi
- GP Nashville (November 20–21)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1481
Gerry Thompson
Ari Lax
Gerard Fabiano
John Kolos
Josh Utter-Leyton
Conley Woods
Martin Juza
Kyle Stoll
- GP Toronto (October 23–24)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1361
Jonathan Smithers
Brad Nelson
Dustin Faeder
Ben Stark
Eric Froehlich
David Howard
Patrick Cox
Stephen Zhang
- GP Florence (November 27–28)
- Format: Limited
- Attendance: 1291
2010 World Championships – Chiba (9–12 December 2010)
Main article: Magic: The Gathering World Championship#2010 World ChampionshipThe 17th Magic World Championships was held in Makuhari Messe in Chiba, Japan.[1] The tournament was by Guillaume Matignon beating long-time friend and colleague Guillaume Wafo-Tapa in the final. In the team event, Slovakia defeated Australia in the finals.[11]
Tournament data
Prize pool: $245,245 (individual) + ? (teams)
Players: 352[12] (57 National Teams)[13]
Formats: Standard, Booster Draft, Extended
Team Formats: Standard, Extended, Legacy
Head Judge: Riccardo TessitoriTop 8
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals 1 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa 3 8 Jonathan Randle 2 1 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa 0 4 Guillaume Matignon 3 4 Guillaume Matignon 3 5 Eric Froelich 1 Guillaume Matignon 3 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa 1 2 Love Janse 3 7 Christopher Wolf 2 2 Love Janse 1 3 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa 3 3 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa 3 6 Lukas Jaklovsky 1 Final standings
Place Player Prize Pro Points Comment 1 Guillaume Matignon
$45,000 25 2nd Final day 2 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
$24,000 20 4th Final day 3 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
$15,000 16 7th Final day 4 Love Janse
$14,000 16 Pro Tour Debut 5 Eric Froehlich
$11,000 12 2nd Final day 6 Lukas Jaklovsky
$10,500 12 7 Christopher Wolf
$10,000 12 8 Jonathan Randle
$9,500 12 Team Competition
Slovakia — Ivan Floch, Robert Jurkovic, Patrik Surab
Australia — Adam Witton, Ian Wood, Jeremy Neeman
Pro Player of the Year final standings
For the first time in Pro Tour history, there was a tie for Pro Player of the Year. The tie players, Brad Nelson and Guillaume Matignon, played a single match play-off at Pro Tour Paris 2011 to determine the winner of the 2010 Pro Player of the Year title. Brad Nelson would win the match 4-2 to claim the 2010 Player of the Year title.[14]
Rank Player Pro Points 1 Brad Nelson
66 Guillaume Matignon
3 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa
64 4 Martin Juza
52 5 Shuhei Nakamura
51 Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
7 Luis Scott-Vargas
47 8 Yuuya Watanabe
45 Performance by country
The United States had the most Top 8 appearances at twelve, but they also had by far the most players playing in the Pro Tour. With 26 they also have the most Pro Club Level 4+ professional players. Compared to the previous season, the United States put 2 more players into Top 8s (+20%) and generated 9 additional "gravy trainers" (+53%). Japan's performance at the top fell sharply, putting 4 players less amongst the Top 8s (-67%) and also generateing 8 level 4+ pros less than in the preceding season (-47%). Meanwhile France had the secondmost Top 8 appearances at 4 after a single Top 8 in 2009.
Country T8 Q Q/T8 M GT Best Player (PPts) United States
12 468 39 210 26 Brad Nelson (66) France
4 87 22 191 6 Guillaume Matignon (66) Germany
3 84 28 202.5 6 Simon Görtzen (40) Japan
2 160 80 160.5 9 Shuhei Nakamura (51) Belgium
2 42 21 168.5 3 Marijn Lybaert (43) Brazil
2 33 17 276 1 Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (64) Czech Republic
1 38 38 127 5 Martin Juza (52) Nethlands
1 53 53 172 2 Bas Melis (25) Italy
1 64 64 197 2 Andrea Giarola (26) T8 = Number of players from that country appearing in a Pro Tour Top 8; Q = Number of players from that country participating in Pro Tours; M = Median finish over all PTs; GT = Gravy Trainers (aka players with a Pro Players Club level of 4 or more) from that country created in the 2010 season; Best Player (PPts) = Player with the most Pro Points from that country, Pro Points of that player in brackets.
References
- ^ a b c d e "Magic Span the Globe in 2010". Wizards of the Coast. 11 August 2009. http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/other/081109a. Retrieved 29 November 2009.
- ^ "The Full Nelson". Wizards of the Coast. 11 February 2011. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptpar11/welcome. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
- ^ "Magic: The Gathering Pro Points Structure". Wizards of the Coast. 2009. http://www.wizards.com/Magic/TCG/Events.aspx?x=grandprix/points. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
- ^ "Pro Tour San Diego–Round 8 Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 19 February 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptsd10/stand8. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
- ^ "Pro Tour San Diego–Top 8 Player Profiles". Wizards of the Coast. 20 February 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptsd10/top8playerprofiles. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
- ^ "Görtzen Goes All the Way in San Diego". Wizards of the Coast. 21 February 2010. http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptsd10/welcome. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
- ^ "Pro Tour San Diego–Round 8 Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 19 February 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptsd10/stand1. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
- ^ "Pro Tour San Juan–Round 1 Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 28 May 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptsj10/stand1. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ David-Marshall, Brian (5 September 2010). "Video Feature: Day Three Wrap-up" (Video). http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptams10/video7. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
- ^ "Pro Tour Amsterdam–Round 1 Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 3 September 2010. http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptams10/stand1. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
- ^ "There's No Jace Like Guillaume". Wizards of the Coast. 12 December 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/worlds10/welcome. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
- ^ "Magic: The Gathering World Championships–Round 1 Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 9 December 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/worlds10/stand1. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
- ^ "Magic: The Gathering World Championships–Round 1 Team Standings". Wizards of the Coast. 9 December 2010. http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/worlds10/teamstand1. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
- ^ Bennett, Josh (12 February 2011). "Player of the Year Match: The Full Nelson". Wizards of the Coast. http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/eventcoverage/ptpar11/feature/poy. Retrieved 2011-10-16.
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