Rogue has to overcome NRG not once, but twice on Sunday - the latter matchup a 4-0 triumph Sunday to win the Grand Finals of the Rocket League Championship Series X - Winter Split NA Event 3. Season 6 started in September 2018 and featured a million dollar prize pool. For Season 7, Psyonix introduced South America as a new region. Season 8 took place in December 2019. The Season 9 championship was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with winners of the regional championships being considered the champions. The Rocket League Championship Series is the second season of the professional Rocket League league. In the finals, eight teams compete on LAN in a double elimination bracket for prize money. Double elimination Bracket. Winners final, Losers final, and Grand Finals are Best of 7. All other matches are Best of 5. It was Cloud9's first RLCS World Championship grand finals appearance after placing third in Season 4 last autumn and fourth in London in June, but you wouldn't know it by their onstage demeanour. After the longest lower bracket run in RLCS history, Cloud9 dethroned Dignitas to claim the world championship for season 6. Having lost their very first series of the weekend against EU’s We Dem Girlz, Cloud9 started their lower bracket run in the first round. A long lower bracket run. Their first series of the final day was against Flipsid3.
Turbopolsa | |
---|---|
Pierre Silfver | |
Personal information | |
Born | 9 August 1998 (age 22) |
Nationality | Swedish |
Career information | |
Status | Active |
League | Rocket League Championship Series |
Current team | Team Envy |
Games | Rocket League |
Career highlights and awards | |
|
Pierre Silfver, also known as Turbopolsa, is a Swedish professional Rocket League player, currently representing Team Envy.
Considered one of the greatest Rocket League players of all time,[1] he has won four Rocket League Championship Series championships, the most out of any player. His first championship came in season 3 with Northern Gaming, where he was signed as a substitute player but was on the active roster for the entire championship tournament. The following season, he joined with Jos 'ViolentPanda' van Meurs and Alexandre 'Kaydop' Courant to form a roster that would win season 4 as Gale Force and season 5 as Dignitas. After leaving Dignitas at the end of season 7, he joined NRG Esports ahead of season 8, with whom he would win his fourth championship. His transfer made him the first RLCS player to move from Europe to North America. He transferred to Team Envy for the most recent season, RLCS X.
Career[edit]
Early career[edit]
Turbopolsa began competing in Rocket League in community-organized tournaments. While he originally had no intention of playing the game professionally, after the team he was on made a deep run in a tournament held shortly before the launch of the Rocket League Championship Series, he and his then-teammates decided to compete together in the newly formed series. He began the inaugural season on KA-POW, before joining a competing team, Mock-It Esports, halfway through the season. In a 2018 interview, Turbopolsa expressed regret with the decision, stating that he later realized Mock-It only brought him on to ruin KA-POW's chances, and that he never felt welcomed by his new teammates. Mock-It was quickly eliminated from the inaugural championship tournament, and Turbopolsa left the team shortly after.[2]
Rlcs Season 6 Grand Finals Results
After failing to reach the championship tournament in season 2, Turbopolsa joined Northern Gaming as a substitute player for season 3, passing on starting roles in favor of joining a team he thought had a better chance of qualifying for offline tournaments. Northern Gaming decided to add a substitute to their roster because one of their starting players feared that he might be forced to miss tournaments due to his academic exams. Turbopolsa was called up to the starting roster late in the regional playoffs, and continued to play through the entirety of the main tournament, which ended with Northern Gaming claiming the Rocket League Championship Series season 3 championship in a win over Turbopolsa's former team, Mock-It.[1][2] At the conclusion of the tournament, his teammate David 'Deevo' Morrow was awarded the MVP award, but Deevo suggested that it should have gone to Turbopolsa instead.[3]
Gale Force and Dignitas[edit]
Turbopolsa departed Northern Gaming at the conclusion of the third season, and shortly afterwards Gale Force captain Jos 'ViolentPanda' van Meurs recruited both Turbopolsa and Alexandre 'Kaydop' Courant.[2] Kaydop was a member of the Mock-it team Turbopolsa had just defeated in the season 3 grand finals.[4] After going 5–2 during the regular season, Gale Force went undefeated through the RLCS season 4 championship tournament, and Turbopolsa was named the tournament MVP.[2] With the win, he became the first ever player to win two RLCS championship titles.[3] The full three-person roster transferred to Dignitas for season 5, and again reached the grand finals of the season championships. The grand finals, against NRG Esports, was tightly contested, going to the final game of the best-of-seven series. In that game, NRG's Justin 'jstn' Morales scored a tying goal after the clock had run out but before the match ended, forcing the match into overtime. Turbopolsa scored the winning goal in overtime, winning his third consecutive, and the full roster's second consecutive championship title.[1][5] The Dignitas roster stayed together for season 6, and once again made it to the grand finals, however they were defeated by Cloud9, a team that had taken 3rd place at the tournament in the previous two seasons.[6] Ahead of season 7, Kaydop departed Dignitas for Renault Vitality, and Dignitas failed to qualify for that season's RLCS championships. Turbopolsa departed the organization at the end of the season.[1][7]
North America[edit]
Turbopolsa, who had up to this point competed in Europe, joined North American team NRG Esports for RLCS season 8. He became the first player to transfer from Europe to North America, and the second player to transfer regions overall, in RLCS competition. The Game Haus' Connor Sanders called the signing 'one of the most important roster moves the game has ever seen', noting that Europe was losing one of the region's most sought-after free agents, and NRG – already North America's strongest team – was gaining a multi-time champion.[7] NRG advanced to the season 8 finals, where they defeated Renault Vitality, which included Turbopulsa's former teammate Kaydop, in a seven-game series.[1] The victory gave Turbopolsa his fourth championship, and he once again was awarded the tournament MVP award.[8][9] He is the only player with four RLCS titles.[10] Turbo continued to compete with NRG in the 9th season of RLCS, but the team struggled in several tournaments in 2020.[11] The RLCS season 9 championship was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[12] Ahead of RLCS X, NRG announced they had removed Turbo from the starting roster.[11] In June 2020, Team Envy announced that they had signed Turbopolsa to compete in the upcoming RLCS X.[13]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdeConlan, Daniel (12 March 2020). 'The top 10 Rocket League players 2020'. GINX. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^ abcdHayward, Andrew (6 April 2018). 'Gale Force's Turbopolsa: The Two-Time RLCS Champion Speaks'. www.redbull.com. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^ abHayward, Andrew. 'Interview: Gale Force Win the RLCS Championship'. www.redbull.com. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^Faletti, Ian (27 February 2017). 'RLCS offseason report cards'. ESPN. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^Mejia, Ozzie (10 June 2018). 'Team Dignitas Wins Rocket League Season 5 Championship After Wild Final Flurry'. Shacknews. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^Mejia, Ozzie (11 November 2018). 'Cloud9 shocks Team Dignitas to win Rocket League Season 6 Championship'. Shacknews. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^ abSanders, Connor (26 July 2019). 'NRG Signs Turbopolsa'. The Game Haus. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^Michael, Cale (15 December 2019). 'NRG drive home as the Rocket League Championship Series season 8 champions'. Dot Esports. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^Makedonski, Brett (15 December 2019). 'NRG imported one of Rocket League's biggest superstars and now they're finally world champions'. Destructoid. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^Nowakowski, Ian (23 January 2020). 'Becoming a Legend: Turbopolsa'. Rocket League Esports. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- ^ ab'NRG Rocket League Roster Update'. NRG Esports. 10 June 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
- ^'Rocket League developer boosts prize pool after canceling event'. Reuters. Field Level Media. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
- ^Team Envy (25 June 2020). '4-Time World Champion and Winningest Player in Rocket League History'(Tweet). Twitter. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
External links[edit]
- Turbopolsa on Twitter
- Turbopolsa on Twitch
The Winter Split ended with the first bracket reset since Cloud9 faced Dignitas in Season 6. This time, Pierre 'Turbopolsa' Silfver was able to come out on top. Although the Grand Finals are the major talking point, this week was full of great matches. As RLCS X takes a break until 2021, fans are left with some strong takeaways about North America's talent pool. Meanwhile, in Europe, Team BDS and Renault Vitality fell early again as the competition begins to intensify in both regions.
Rlcs Season 9 Finals
5) Europe The Grid Semi-Finals - Galaxy Racer vs Team Singularity
Galaxy Racer have been on everyone's radar lately, but Team Singularity hadn't made much of a splash in a while before this week. This week's eventual champions, Team Singularity, were able to take down Galaxy Racer in Game 7. It wasn't the cleanest series from Singularity, as they gave up four goals in three different games, but they came through when it mattered most by shutting out Galaxy Racer in the final game. It was an impressive run for Singularity on their way to the Grid finals as they only won a single series in the Group Stage. The series was back and forth, and it could easily have fallen in Galaxy Racer's favour. Singularity's wins were only by a single goal, while Galaxy Racer's wins were by much more convincing leads.
The rest of these matches will be from the NA Regional, but if the time is available, check out some of the other matches from this week's EU Grid. As of this moment, Renault Vitality and Team BDS both fall outside of the top five in the Grid rankings, and the top five in Regional rankings is closer than it has been all season.
4) North America Lower Quarterfinals - G2 Esports vs Spacestation Gaming
G2 fell short of the Regional trophy again, but they are always so close. G2 is always in the mix against teams like Spacestation and NRG, but they couldn't take down SSG. Spacestation had a rough run of things to get to this point after losing to Alpine in their first series of the tournament. They squeaked past Version1 and Ghost Gaming, both series going the distance, and, despite sweeping the Kansas City Pioneers, didn't look dominant while doing it.
Rlcs Season 6 Grand Finals Schedule
This series over G2 seemed like the breaking point where they finally turned things around. G2 was able to take an early 2-1 lead in the series, but Spacestation ran the table after that by outscoring G2 ten goals to two in the final three games. After that, they would dominate Rogue and NRG on their way to the finals.