2017 Mid-Season Invitational

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2017 Mid-Season Invitational
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Tournament information
Sport League of Legends
Location Brazil
Dates 28 April–21 May
Administrator(s) Riot Games
Venue(s) CBLOL Studio
(São Paulo, Play-in stage)
Jeunesse Arena
(Rio de Janeiro, Main Event)
Teams 13
Final positions
Champions SK Telecom T1
Runners-up G2 Esports
MVP Lee "Wolf" Jae-wan
(SK Telecom T1)
← 2016 2018 →

The 2017 Mid-Season Invitational was the third annual League of Legends Mid-Season Invitational (MSI) tournament, hosted by Riot Games. The tournament was held from April 28 to May 21, 2017, in Brazil. This was the first time MSI had been extended. Each of 13 premier League of Legends leagues had a team that won the Spring Split represent them; Europe (EU LCS), South Korea (LCK), and China (LPL) had their teams automatically admitted into the main event whereas the other 10 leagues competed among each other in a "Play-in Stage" with the top 3 teams advancing to join the main event.[1]

SK Telecom T1 from South Korea successfully defended their championship from the previous year, defeating G2 Esports 3–1 in the final.

Qualified teams

Based on the result of the MSI and World Championship in 2 years before (2015–2016), 3 teams from Europe (EU LCS), South Korea (LCK), and China (LPL) are started in Main Group stage, 2 teams from North America (NA LCS) and Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau (LMS) are started in Play-in round 2, and instead of the Mid-Season International Wildcard Invitational in 2015–2016, 8 teams from Wildcard regions are started in Play-in round 1.

Region League Team ID
Start in Main Group stage
China LPL Team WE WE
Europe EU LCS G2 Esports G2
South Korea LCK SK Telecom T1 SKT
Start in Play-in round 2
North America NA LCS Team SoloMid TSM
Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau LMS Flash Wolves FW
Start in Play-in round 1
Brazil CBLOL RED Canids RED
CIS LCL Virtus.pro VP
Japan LJL Rampage RPG
Latin America North LLN Lyon Gaming LYN
Latin America South CLS Isurus Gaming ISG
Oceania OPL Dire Wolves DW
Vietnam►Southeast Asia VCS►GPL GIGABYTE Marines GAM
Turkey TCL SuperMassive eSports SUP

Venues

São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro were the two cities chosen to host the competition.

Brazil
São Paulo Rio de Janeiro
Play-in Stage Main Event
CBLoL Studio Jeunesse Arena
Capacity: Capacity: 15,430
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Play-In Stage

Groups

First place teams of each group advance to round 2 of the stage[2]

Group A

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Group B

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Knockouts

Winners of the series advance to group stage. Losers drops to round 3.

GIGABYTE Marines advance to group stage by beating SuperMassive eSports 3–1. GPL of Southeast Asia gets directly spot in Main Group Stage for Summer Split winner and additional spot in Play-in Stage for Summer Split Runner-up at 2017 World Championship.[3]

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Group stage

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Knockout stage

  • The 1st-place team plays with the 4th-place team, The 2nd-place team plays with the 3rd-place team in semifinals.
  • All matches are Best-of-five.

Template:4TeamBracket-Info

Ranking

Place League Teams PS1 PS2 PS3 GS SF Final
1st LCK SK Telecom T1 8–2 3–0 3–1
2nd EU LCS G2 Esports 4–6 3–1 1–3
3rd–4th LPL Team WE 7–3 1–3
LMS Flash Wolves 3–1 4–6 0–3
5th NA LCS Team SoloMid 3–2 4–6
6th VCS►GPL GIGABYTE Marines 5–1 2–3 3–1 3–7
7th TCL SuperMassive e-Sports 5–1 0–3 1–3
8–9th CBLOL RED Canids 4–2
LLN Lyon Gaming 4–2
10–11th LCL Virtus.pro 2–4
OPL Dire Wolves 2–4
12–13th LJL Rampage 1–5
CLS Isurus Gaming 1–5

References

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