Samsung Galaxy fought great, but SK Telecom T1 was hands-down the better fighter. And after adding a third championship to their name in just four years, itâs safe to say they are the best team in League of Legends history. That outcome seemed just as inevitable before last nightâs finals as after them. Of course SKT would take the series. Of course Lee âFakerâ Sanghyeok was going to win MVP of the tournament and solidify his legacy as the best player in League of Legends history.
Apollo Creed was always going to beat Rocky senseless, winning on points if nothing else, making you feel silly for ever truly doubting the outcome. SKT did something similar last night, even going so far as to troll any part of the Staples Center audience who had momentarily believed that SSG might somehow accomplish the unthinkable. âThanks for cheering us,â Faker said to the crowd at the end of the night, âbut donât cheer us too loud, because weâre going to be back here anyway.â
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But for a couple hours last night, SSG did make people believe. They clawed their way back from a seemingly hopeless game three, eventually tying the series at 2-2. Even though SKT convincingly beat them in the second half of the fifth and final match, SSG proved their superior rivals would have to play at the top of their game to do so.
Game three went nearly 72 minutes, making it the longest match of Worlds 2016. For the first third of that, SSG was effectively just a punching bag, continually taking hits from SKT without ever successfully landing any direct shots of their own. It wasnât until the 26th minute, down seven kills to none and behind by almost 10k gold, that SSG finally drew some blood
The fight was a mess, with SSG narrowly taking out one of SKTâs weaker supports, before later trading the kill right back after Faker swooped in to steady his team. It was desperate but it was something, suggesting that with their backs up against the wall, SSG would at least try to give back some of the punishment theyâd received before exiting the world stage.
Then, only a few minutes later, when SKT probably expected SSG to be licking their wounds and preparing for the end, the former champions let their guard down and tried to hastily take Baron with several players still out of position. As if SSG could smell in the air that it was do or die for them, they marched up to the pit and pounced on their opponents with everything they had left. The move proved a pivotal turning point in the match, cutting STKâs lead more or less in half and securing SSG the Baron buff.
From there, both teams fought bitterly for another 40 minutes. Moments earlier, the casters and analysts had all but declared the match complete and the series won, but SSG had other ideas. Rather then resign themselves to defeat, SSG decided to make SKT pay dearly for taking an early victory lap.
In some ways, this is what makes SSGâs almost-comeback more admirable and compelling than the close 3-2 semifinals that almost saw SKT defeated. SSG made the finals competitive and long-lived not because of relative parity between the two teams facing off but in spite of the lack of it. They kept up with the best of the best, held their own, and found a way to exceed their limits when nobody expected them to get back off the mat.
The best parts of any competition are the moments that make everything feel equal, when you are momentarily convinced that all possibilities are open and we donât actually live in some cold, deterministic universe. SSG helped create that illusion not just for one match, but across several.
Of course, every competition needs a winner, so eventually the dream always ends. To the degree that any team can ever âdeserveâ to win, SKT fulfilled those criteria last night, and the fact that they now have as many Worlds championships as every other team in League of Legends combined means theyâre achievement wonât be forgotten any time soon. But if thereâs any reason to remember this particular championship series years from now, itâll be because of SSGâs stunning game three rally.