Global StarCraft II Team League explained

Global StarCraft II Team League should not be confused with Global StarCraft II League.

Global StarCraft II Team League
Sport:StarCraft II
Founded:2011
Folded:2013
Director:GomTV
Blizzard Entertainment
Country:Worldwide
Continents:-->
Website:http://www.gomexp.com/

The Global StarCraft II Team League (GSTL) was a StarCraft II tournament series hosted by GomTV and Blizzard Entertainment in South Korea. It ran from 2011 to 2013 as a team event parallel to the individual Global StarCraft II League, broadcast on Thursday and Friday, to not conflict with the GSL's Monday to Wednesday broadcast.[1] [2] Following competition with the KeSPA-run StarCraft II Proleague, which had fully transitioned to Starcraft II in 2013, the GSTL folded, having played its last grand finals event in November 2013.

Teams

This is a list of teams that participated in the final season of the GSTL.

Team Debut Season Final Season Result Final Playoffs Result
Axiom-Acer2013 GSTL Preseason 1st 1st
AZUBU2013 GSTL Preseason 2nd 2nd
StarTale2011 GSTL Feb. 3rd 3rd
For Our Utopia2011 GSTL Feb. 4th DNQ
SouL2011 GSTL Feb. 5th DNQ

Other teams that participated in prior seasons of the tournament include Incredible Miracle (including with SK Gaming as IM-SK),[3] Team Liquid, MVP, Prime, New Star HoSeo, Fnatic, SlayerS, Old Generations, FXOpen e-Sports, ZeNEX, F.United, and Team SCV Life. Some foreign teams partnered with local ones to participate in the league, including Evil Geniuses with SlayerS under the name SlayerS-EG, Team Liquid (prior to participating on their own) with Old Generations under oGsTL, and Quantic Gaming with StarTale under StarTaleQ. Axiom-Acer was itself a partnership between Axiom eSports and Team Acer, two non-Korean teams.

Of these, Incredible Miracle, StarTale, MVP, Prime, and EG-Liquid, a combination of Evil Geniuses and Team Liquid, moved to the competing StarCraft II Proleague, some before and some after the dissolution of the GSTL.

History

The Global StarCraft II Team League started in February 2011. For its first iterations, the GSTL was a short, 4 day event that invited the top 8 Korean teams to play and took place within a single month.[4] Following three such events in 2011, This format was eventually abandoned due to the popularity of the events, with the tournament series transitioning to multiple month seasons.[5] The new GSTL format allowed a greater number of teams to participate.[6] The inclusion of new teams led to the debut of non-Korean teams participating in the GSTL, both independently and in partnership with local Korean teams. Following this change, the league hovered between 8 and 12 teams, peaking with the latter twice, once each in 2011 and 2012. For its final season, the 2013 HOT6 GSTL Season 2, the league contracted significantly as three teams left the league, with five participating teams remaining. The format changed once again, including a greatly reworked final playoff tournament.[7]

Champions

Main Events

Season-based bgcolor=#add8e6 width="15"Month-based
Year Name of Tournament Winner Result of Final Runner-up
2011Sony Ericsson Global StarCraft II Team League Feb. Incredible Miracle 5 - 4Startale
2011Global StarCraft II Team League Mar. SlayerS 5 - 4 Incredible Miracle
2011Global StarCraft II Team League May SlayerS 5 - 4 MVP
20112011 Global StarCraft II Team League Season 1 MVP 5 - 3 Prime
20122012 Global StarCraft II Team League Season 1 Prime 5 - 2 StarTaleQ
20122012 HOT6 Global StarCraft II Team League Season 2 FXOpen e-Sports 5 - 0 SlayerS
20122012 HOT6 Global StarCraft II Team League Season 3 FXOpen e-Sports 5 - 3 MVP
20132013 BenQ Global StarCraft II Team League Season 1 Incredible Miracle 4 - 2 AZUBU
20132013 HOT6 Global StarCraft II Team League Season 2 Axiom-Acer 2 - 1 (6 - 7)* AZUBU

World Championship Team Event

From March 28 to March 29, 2011, GomTV hosted a special tournament called the 2011 LG Cinema 3D GOMTV World Championship Seoul. The GOMTV World Championship hosted Team Korea vs. World All Stars in a single elimination best of 15 format. The tournament lasted all the way till game 15 but the World All Stars could not complete the come back and beat Team Korea.

Preseason Event

On February 12, it was announced that GomTV would be hosting a GSTL Preseason event for the first StarCraft II expansion, Heart of the Swarm.[8] This was the first GomTV tournament played on this new version of the game, and was played on the beta servers. It was the only preseason GSTL event organized, as the league folded following its second 2013 regular season.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New GSTL and GSL Format . 2011-06-23 . 2011-06-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110624174921/http://www.gomtv.net/2011gstls1/news/65575 . dead .
  2. Web site: The revamped Global Starleagues GSL and GSTL have arrived. 20 June 2011. 29 November 2022.
  3. Web site: GSTL Season 2: OGs out, EG+Slayers, LG-IM+SK in.
  4. Web site: GSTL Information . 2011-06-17 . 2011-08-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110811053902/http://www.gomtv.net/2011gstl1/news/60315 . dead .
  5. http://www.teamliquid.net/poll/index.php?poll_id=493 Best GSL Tournament Poll on Team Liquid
  6. http://www.gomtv.net/2011gstls1/news/65543 The New GSTL Format
  7. Web site: 2013 HOT6 GSTL Season 2 starts on September 3rd. https://web.archive.org/web/20130905122201/http://www.gomtv.net/forum/view.gom?topicid=302138&cid=0&kind=8 . 29 November 2022. 2013-09-05 .
  8. http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=398192 HotS GSTL Pre-Season Announced