Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SK Telecom T1 won the LCK Spring 2019 title after defeating Griffin in the finals with 3–0. This marked the seventh LCK title for SK Telecom T1. [7] On 31 August 2019, SK Telecom T1 once again defeated Griffin in the finals with a score of 3–1. This was their eighth championship title, and also their back-to-back LCK title in 2019. [8]
The 2024 LCK season was the 13th season of the League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK), a professional South Korean esports league for the MOBA PC game League of Legends. The season is divided into two splits: Spring and Summer. The Spring Split began on 17 January 2024 and culminated with the playoff finals on 14 April.
The 2024 League of Legends World Championship Final was a League of Legends (LoL) esports series between Bilibili Gaming and T1 on 2 November 2024 at The O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom, marking the fourteenth final of a LoL World Championship and the final championship series to take place under the two-split competitive calendar as a new split structure and competitive calendar for the ...
In the 2023 LCK Spring Split, Gen.G secured a second-place finish in the standings, trailing behind T1. During the playoffs, they defeated Hanwha with a 3–1 victory, earning a spot in the LCK Finals against T1. [65] The best-of-five match took place on April 9, 2023, and Gen.G won by a 3–1 score, securing Peanut his fifth LCK title. [66]
The spring split began on 12 January and finished on 20 March, immediately followed by the spring playoffs, which concluded with the spring finals, [2] where T1 defeated Gen.G with a match score of 3–1 on 2 April. [3] T1 represented the LCK in the 2022 Mid-Season Invitational, losing out to defending champions Royal Never Give Up 3–2 in the ...
The 2023 LCK season was the twelfth season of South Korea's LCK, a professional esports league for the MOBA PC game League of Legends. The season was divided into two splits: Spring and Summer. The season was divided into two splits: Spring and Summer.
LCK Promotion LCK Challengers League Oceanic Pro League (OPL) 1st (professional) Oceania: Sydney 2015 2020 8 Worlds 1P: League of Legends Circuit Oceania: League of Legends Master Series: 1st (professional) Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau: Taipei: 2015 2019 8 Worlds 2G + 1P: Pacific Championship Series (merged) League of Legends SEA Tour: 1st (professional)
In the match against T1 to determine the 4th seed, they lost with a set score of 2–3, and was placed second in the Regional Finals. [21] Second place allowed Deft and his team to qualify for the World Championship, this time as the lowest LCK seed having to start the competition from The Play-In Tournament.