2014 Pokémon World Championships

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
2014 Pokémon World Championships
File:Pokémon World Champtionships 2014.jpg
Tournament information
Location Washington, D.C.
Dates August 13–15
Administrator(s) Play! Pokémon
Tournament format(s) Swiss rounds, knock-out finals
Venue(s) Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Participants 155
Purse US$5,000 in scholarships
Final positions
Champions South Korea Se Jun Park (Masters) United States Nikolai Zielinski (Seniors) Japan Kota Yamamoto (Juniors)
Runners-up United States Jeudy Azzarelli (Masters) United Kingdom Mark Mcquillan (Seniors) United States London Swan (Juniors)
Tournament statistics
Matches played 481 matches in 3 divisions
Attendance 3,000
← 2013 2015 →

The 2014 Pokémon World Championships was the sixth annual e-Sport invitee tournament held by Play! Pokémon, a branch of The Pokémon Company who reunites the top Pokémon video game players from North America, Europe, South Africa, Australia, South Korea and Japan. The event took place in the Walter E. Washington Convention Center on Washington D.C. alongside the 2014 Pokémon Trading Card Game World Championship who were in their eleventh edition.[1]

The tournament was streamed via Twitch reaching more than 800,000 viewers around the world.[2] The title holder was Arash Omatti on the Masters Division meanwhile Brendan Zheng and Hayden McTavish were the title holders for Juniors and Seniors Division respectively. Junichi Masuda, video game designer for the Pokémon franchise and member of the board of directors of Game Freak attended the opening ceremony.

Qualification

The qualification process for the Pokémon World Championships is based on results obtained from Play! Pokémon official tournaments like Premier Challenges, Regional Tournaments, National Tournaments and the 2013 Pokémon World Championship.[3]

The invitations for the Masters Division of the tournament were distributed on the next format:[4]

  • Top 4 Players from the 2013 Pokémon World Championships.
  • Top 32 Players from Europe with most Championship Points in the season.
  • Top 16 Players from North America with most Championship Points in the season.
  • Top Players from Australia, South Korea, Japan and South Africa with most Championship Points in their respective circuit.
  • Top 4 Players from the Last Chance Qualifier Tournament held the day before the tournament in the same venue.

Most of the invitations doesn't include a fully paid trip to the tournament, in consequence several players can't attend the tournament.

Tournament

Players per country

  • Masters Division [5]
Country Zone # of Players
 United States North America 22
 Germany Europe 10
 United Kingdom Europe 7
 Japan Japan 7
 Australia Australia 4
 Italy Europe 3
 Spain Europe 2
 South Korea South Korea 2
 South Africa South Africa 1
 Canada North America 1
 Ireland Europe 1

Results

Day one of the tournament consisted on six Swiss Rounds at best-of-three matches were the eight best overall scores advance to the knock out stage elimination with best-of-three matches. On day one, 52 players were eliminated including title holder Arash Omatti and former three-times World Champion Ray Rizzo.

  • Masters Division [6]
Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                 
1  JPN Ryosuke Kosuge 1
8  GER Markus Liu '2
8  GER Markus Liu 0
5  USA Jeudy Azzarelli 2
5  USA Jeudy Azzarelli 2
4  UK Lee Provost 0
5  USA Jeudy Azzarelli 0
6  KOR Se Jun Park 2
3  ESP Miguel Marti de la Torre 0
6  KOR Se Jun Park 2
6  KOR Se Jun Park 2
2  USA Collin Heier 0
7  AUS Dayne O'Meara 0
2  USA Collin Heier 2

Final standings

Masters Division

Place Player
1st South Korea Se Jun Park
2nd United States Jeudy Azarelli
3rd United States Collin Heier
4th Germany Markus Liu

Seniors Division

Place Player
1st United States Nikolai Zielinski
2nd United Kingdom Mark Mcquillan
3rd Spain Eric Rios
4th United States Ian McLaughlin

[7]

Juniors Division

Place Player
1st Japan Kota Yamamoto
2nd United States London Swan
3rd Japan Haruka Narita
4th Japan Riku Miyoshi

[8]

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Six Pokémon Trainers Crowned World Champions at the 2014 Pokémon World Championships - Anime News Network
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.