24 October 2011

2011 State Championship Report *1st Place*

My name is Timothy Thomason. My friends call me “Ty.” You can call me “Champ.”

History

The state championships have always had a special appeal to me. I spent six years in the navy, and I traveled across the country. Due to my busy schedule, I could never get time off to go to big events like Pro Tours and Grand Prixs, and I was always finding myself in situations where I would concede to a friend in the top 8 of a PTQ since I couldn't go. Since states didn't qualify you for anything, it was one of the few big tournaments each year I could win outright, so I always tried hard.

The first states I played in were in 2003 and 2004, both in Texas. I played Goblins the first year and KCI the second year, putting up respectable finishes for me at the time, but no top 8s. In 2005, I was home on leave for the Texas states that year, and played a Searing Meditation deck I picked up the day of the event to a 2nd place finish. You can read more about the interesting finals matchup here.

After that, I took back to back two headed giant states titles, in two completely different states: 2006 in South Carolina with fellow multi-title holder AJ Fields, and 2007 in Hawaii. Still, the individual title has eluded me. An undefeated swiss record in the 2009s saw me lose in the quarterfinals. A couple of bad deck choices cost me at other times. I wanted this year to be different.

The Called Shot

If you are a baseball fan, you know of Babe Ruth's “called shot” homerun in game 3 of the 1932 World Series. If not, you can read about it here. The magical ability to call your shot, or guarantee a win a la Joe Namath has a special appeal.

I found out about this year's state championships on September 12, when it was posted to the Texas Magic Zone bulletin boards. This is what I had to say:

“Don't bother showing up, I'm winning this.”

The Deck

Until FNM the night before states, I hadn't played any standard with Innistrad. I had mostly been focused on limited for the PTQ season, and grinding the local drafts to get those Planeswalker Points. The night before the tournament, I played a casual version of BantPod from TCGplayer columnist Zach Krizan's article to a 3-2 record. I learned a lot about the format, but was still undecided on what to play. I considered Solar Flare on David Thomas's recommendation, but Robert Berni was pushing for Wolf Run Ramp. I put my collection of Standard legal cards into my car, and went to sleep still undecided.

The morning of, I awoke and showered, then checked twitter. I saw GP Brisbane coverage was up and had decklists for the GPT winners. A couple of the decks were mono green splashing Kessig Wolf Run, to accommodate Dungrove Elder. Berni and I had been trying to work this card into the SB, and when I saw these lists I knew I wanted them main.

I drove to the site, and after circling forever for parking, I managed to get inside to get a deck registration sheet. As I ate breakfast at the donut shop next door, I started the list with things I wanted in my deck: 4 Dungrove Elder, 4 Beast Within, 4 Garruk, Primal Hunter, 4 Green Sun's Zenith. After a bit of tinkering, and making sure I had all the cards I was writing down, this is the final list I decided on:

Wolf Run Green by Timothy Thomason
Finished 1st Place at 2011 States - Texas



Main Deck

1 Acidic Slime
1 Birds of Paradise
4 Dungrove Elder
3 Primeval Titan
3 Solemn Simulacrum
1 Thrun, the Last Troll
4 Viridian Emissary
2 Wurmcoil Engine

4 Garruk, Primal Hunter
1 Batterskull
4 Beast Within
4 Green Sun's Zenith
4 Rampant Growth

18 Forest 
2 Inkmoth Nexus
2 Kessig Wolf Run
2 Mountain 

Sideboard
3 Acidic Slime
3 Ancient Grudge
1 Batterskull
1 Birds of Paradise
3 Sword of Feast and Famine
1 Sword of War and Peace
1 Thrun, the Last Troll
2 Tree of Redemption


The deck has been talked about elsewhere, but I'll Reiterate it here: Dungrove Elder is AMAZING. Aggro decks can't attack into him, Control decks have to wrath him or lose, and the other ramp decks can't compete with his size. I think Owen Turtenwald had a better version overall if you are looking to play it.

The Tournament

203 People showed up to a venue that can maybe hold 150 on a good day. Several matches happened outside behind the building. These were obviously the lower numbered tables, so it gave a good incentive to win! Many of the big names of Texas magic were there, including Nathan Zamora, Zach Krizan, David Thomas, and Robert Berni. Notably absent: defending champion David Cook, national team member Haibing Hu, GP finalist (and my roommate) William Lowry, and the infamous Phu Q. Dao.


Round 1 - Robert Gorke, RW Equipment, possibly Puresteel Paladin

I lose the first game to Mirran Crusader and multiple pro-green swords. The 2nd game I win because he mills an Ancient Grudge with his Sword of Body and Mind, and I get Batterskull onto Dungrove Elder. Game 3 I draw all three Ancient Grudges, so I still had all DeEz!
1-0


Round 2 - Chris Morris, Shape Anew

I know what he is playing, and I'm not too happy about it. Game 1 he goes for it turn 4 after turn 3 Blade Splicer, but I get him with Beast Within. He has ponder to find second Shape Anew on his Inkmoth Nexus, and then Day of Judgement to clear the way for Blightsteel Colossus. Game 2 is more of the same, this time he waits for Apostle's Blessing backup before going for it.
1-1


Round 3 - Timothy Ivey, Bant Pod

Once I figure out he's playing BantPod, I know he doesn't have many outs to Dungrove Elder. I just need to avoid getting locked by Venser and Stonehorn Dignitary, if he's even playing it. A couple of Elders each game make short work of him.
2-1


Round 4 - Simon Gilgenbach, Wolf Run Ramp

Simon is a good local player, but I've never played against him before. Here I get to see for the first time just how good Dungrove Elder is in the mirror. It was better than I thought!
3-1

After this round we found out it was only 1x PWP multiplier. With less on the line, it was time to have a couple shots in between rounds...

Round 5 - Will Sheeran

Maybe it was the shots, but I don't remember this round at all. Might have been another Wolf Run Ramp.
4-1

Round 6 - Kris Baxter, RW Control?

He plays the following cards: Incinerate, Blade Splicer, Hero of Bladehold, and Karn Liberated. None of those could beat Dungrove Elder and Wurmcoil Engine. Game 2 I think he was manascrewed.
5-1

Round 7 - Orry Swift, Mono Red

This was my first real test against an aggro deck to see if cutting Slagstorm would come back to haunt me. An early Dungrove Elder allows me to chump his Stormblood Berserkers with Emissarys without fear of getting blown out. Garruk draws a bunch of cards and Wurmcoil puts the game out of reach. Game 2 he gets stuck on 2 lands with double Manabarbs in hand, and I get there with Batterskull and Dungrove.
6-1

Looking at the standings, I'm the last of the 18 pointers. There is 1 17 pointer, and a handful of 16 pointers, so most people have to play the final round.


Round 8 - Roy Xu, Solar Flare

Game 1 he plays Spellskite and follows up with turn 5 Jace, Memory Adept. He mills himself, but hits nothing. The next turn he mills himself again, and hits only Unburial Rites, but no creature. The third time he hits Sun Titan, getting back Oblivion Ring on my Garruk. He then starts milling me, but makes a mistake and taps out letting me Beast Within his Spellskite EOT, and kill him with Inkmoth Nexus in one shot. Game 2 he doesn't draw blue mana.
7-1, first after swiss


The top 8 looked favorable for me, I only wanted to dodge Nathan Zamora's UB Control deck, since he's a good player and has access to 4 Tribute to Hunger after SB. Also didn't want to play against Robert Toups's Human deck, since I didn't have access to Slagstorm.

Quarterfinals - Dominic Le, Mage Blade

Dominic makes the comment that he's never beaten me at a sanctioned tournament. This is a good sign, I think. I take a quick game 1 when he doesn't draw blue mana. Game 2 he Mana Leaks my first 3 plays, thanks to Snapcaster Mage, and then gets me with Gideon and Sword of Feast and Famine. Game 3 I play multiple Acidic Slimes to keep him off of Day of Judgement mana, and he doesn't draw out of it.
8-1


Semifinals - Jeffrey LaRue, Solar Flare

His deck almost seemed like Esper Planeswalkers. He had Karn and Elspeth to go with his Lilianas, as well as Jace in the SB I think. Game 1 I kept a hand of Rampant Growth, Inkmoth Nexus, Kessig Wolf Run, and 4 forests. Nexus allows me to pressure his Liliana, and he keeps having both players discard. Eventually I stick a Garruk, then GSZ for Acidic Slime on his O-Ring to get it back and take over the game. Game 2 I play 3 Garruks; the third one finally kills him.
9-1


Finals - Alex Fan, Wolf Run Ramp

Alex has been running hot lately, having finished 2nd place at the PTQ the week before. He's made comments that he didn't want to face me, but if you want to be the champion, you are going to have to beat the best.

I offer both boxes for the title and the plaque, but he doesn't accept. He claims he has no use for boxes.

Game 1 I have double Dungrove Elder and double Primeval Titan, so eventually my guys were too big for him to deal with. I skillfully assigned damage away from his Viridian Emissaries when he would double block, denying him the mana that is so important in the mirror.

After game 1 I offer the split again, and this time he wisely accepts. And now I'm the Heavyweight Texas State Champion Of The World.


Aftermath

My birthday was on the next Monday, so we went out for double celebrations. I made a single post to my facebook, announcing the win.

In US National Team member Haibing Hu's tournament report, he called me the best Magic player in Texas. Now I have the plaque to prove it.


Props:

Glen Goddard and Sunmesa Events for keeping states alive. 3 years and more popular than ever!
Juan Loya for repping Texas and sniping the Oklahoma States title with an almost identical deck!
Everyone that lent me cards, especially Casual Chad. Too bad you're still banned from the store!
Everyone that didn't play because they knew I would win!

Slops:

David Cook - I know I said I would win, but you can at least attempt to defend your title!
Andrew Krug - For never going to anything anymore ever.
EH Events / 3rd Coast Cards - Usually a good tournament from these guys, but having people play outside is kind of ridiculous.
Wizards of the Coast / DCI - Whoever decided that this couldn't be done with a higher PWP multiplier. I got 36 points from my 3-2 performance at FNM the night before, and 35 points from my 10-1 championship run.

03 January 2011

Guest Post: Keya Saleh on the 2005 State Championship Rematch

(I copied this from PureMTGO strictly for archival purposes)

Hello and welcome back!

It's been a while since I have been able to sit and put digital ink to paper. Work and life commitments have been really eating into my Magic time. But I am back to tell a tale of the bizarre and the humorous.

Sadly, or perhaps epically, my most prominent Magical achievement is probably winning the 2005 State Championships. Normally this wouldn't be anything too unique or interesting, but I think you will agree it is anything but normal when you spy the winning decklist below:

Battle of Wits
2005 State Champs Finals
Creatures
4 Meloku the Clouded Mirror
3 Kagemaro, First to Suffer
7 cards

Other Spells
4 Dark Banishing
4 Wrath of God
4 Befoul
2 Confiscate
2 Final Judgment
4 Sickening Shoal
3 Disrupting Shoal
1 Honden of Cleansing Fire
4 Hinder
1 Honden of Seeing Winds
4 Hideous Laughter
4 Rend Flesh
1 Honden of Life's Web
4 Gifts Ungiven
4 Sensei's Divining Top
4 Night of Souls' Betrayal
1 Honden of Infinite Rage
4 Counsel of the Soratami
4 Ghostly Prison
4 Chastise
1 Ivory Mask
4 Diabolic Tutor
4 Battle of Wits
2 Cruel Edict
4 Brainspoil
4 Convolute
4 Muddle the Mixture
4 Spectral Searchlight
4 Clutch of the Undercity
4 Dimir Signet
4 Nightmare Void
2 Telling Time
4 Compulsive Research
4 Induce Paranoia
4 Perplex
3 Terrarion
4 Consult the Necrosages
4 Last Gasp
4 Ribbons of Night
4 Mana Leak
4 Enduring Ideal
3 Oppressive Will
3 Exile into Darkness
3 Reverence
1 Meishin, the Mind Cage
4 Tidings
3 Eradicate
4 Rewind
160 cards Lands
4 Adarkar Wastes
14 Plains
20 Swamp
4 Underground River
35 Island
4 Caves of Koilos
1 Genju of the Realm
4 Tendo Ice Bridge
4 Cloudcrest Lake
4 Waterveil Cavern
2 Watery Grave
96 cards

Sideboard
2 Persecute
4 Horobi's Whisper
4 Jushi Apprentice
4 Pithing Needle
1 Twincast
15 cards
Battle of Wits


That's a lot of cards. Through a little bit of fate and luck, I was able to find the cards that I needed when I needed them and made it all the way to the finals of the tournament. When the dust settled, I was the owner of the winner's plaque. My original (heavily edited) report is available here:

http://magic.tcgplayer.com/db/article.asp?ID=5880

The important part of this article for today's purpose lies at the end. Due to a number of factors, Ty, my finals opponent and good friend of mine, elected to drop from the tournament and I was declared the victor. The coming weeks were filled with goofy and fun tales of Battle of Wits winning the state championships.

Flash Forward to the December 18, 2010. I am completing my morning ritual (bowl of cheerios and cleaning out my gmail) when I find that I have a facebook message from Ty.

Ty, like most of us, has grown up. He lives out in Hawaii via the Navy. He found himself with some downtime and had a funny thought spring into his head. Why don't we settle the score and see what might have been. He messaged me and asked if I wanna play it out on MTGO.

Oddly enough, this could not have come at a better time. I am off from work thanks to being employed by the school system. Plus I figure it would be a funny writeup that the people might enjoy. I say to myself: Self, let's do this!

After a few back and forth messages, Ty and I are able to come an arrangement. The time: 1ish on Tuesday. The place: Casual Decks room.

Between both of our collections, we have all of the cards necessary to put together both decks, with a few small purchases (very small since most of these cards are next to useless in today’s magic).

Interestingly enough, Ty has managed to rally a pretty big segment of the Texas magic base, so the match ends of having about 10 spectators. Nathan, friend and former magic player, even commented that “this is probably the exact same people that would’ve matched this match 5 years ago”.  Now, we have some real stakes: pride, bragging rights, and the use of an awesome avatar painstakingly created by our friend Sean:


Thanks again Sean for all of your hard work on this masterpiece.  =P

After a quick review of the decklist to remember what in the world is in this monstrosity, Ty puts the game up and we get down to business……….or so I thought. MTGO won’t let me join the game. I laughingly have to message Ty that I need to borrow one more card: Island. Despite having almost all the cards I need to play whatever format I want, I come up short on the most common digital object online.

One quick trade later and we are getting down to business.

For reference here is the decklist that Ty is bringing to the game:

Searing Angel
2005 State Champs Finals

Creatures
4 Firemane Angel
3 Shard Phoenix
7 cards

Other Spells
4 Wrath of God
3 Sensei's Divining Top
1 Honden of Infinite Rage
3 Journeyer's Kite
3 Honden of Cleansing Fire
4 Peace of Mind
4 Devouring Light
4 Searing Meditation
4 Lightning Helix
30 cards Lands
6 Mountain
8 Plains
4 Battlefield Forge
3 Boros Garrison
2 Sacred Foundry
23 cards

Sideboard
3 Pyroclasm
3 Terashi's Grasp
4 Ivory Mask
2 Pithing Needle
3 Defense Grid
15 cards
Searing Meditation
The general consensus is that I have the advantage due to the incredibly slow nature of his deck, but the randomness I am stuck with can still come back to bite me.

Sidebar: It's interesting to note that some of our decks functionalities are different from when the match was first played thanks to the new rules. Ty's Shard Phoenix is hurt by his inability to stack damage, and my spectral searchlight can no longer ping him like it did back in the day (which did win me 2 games at the original tourney).

Belated 2005 State Champs, Game 1:

We take a few minutes to wait for all of our friends to get online and then we are ready to roll. I am going first and get the following opener:



I actually debate keeping this for a little while. Then I remember he has Wraths. Thankfully, mulliganing with this deck is 100000000x easier on MTGO. Take that, Paper Magic!



Bleh! But it is less bleh than the prospect of going to 5 on the play with this deck.

Ty keeps his opener and we are good to go.

We both have predictably slow starts. Ty gets down (Sensei’s Divining Top) and begins sifting his library while I seek the Counsel of the Soratami, netting me some counterspells. Ty goes for a Peace of Mind and I decide to Hinder it to the bottom. My deck give me a Kagemaro, so we are going for the beatdown plan. Ty quickly shuts that down with a Lightning Helix, topped off by the fact that I didn’t leave a black open and he gets the life gain (grrr).

Ty goes for another Peace of Mind which gets Rewound. I rip a second Kagemaro and try to go for the gusto again. Shard Phoenix comes down to step in the way, but won’t be able to kill it thanks to the new rules.

We trade hits for a few turns, but Ty plops down a Honden of Cleansing Fire, so my swings are much less efficient than his birds. A few hits and life gain puts it at 16-all. I try to get in with a 5/5 Kagemaro again and he runs into a Devouring Light. I remember to activate the Maro this time and sweep the board.

Ty regroups with a Firemane Angel, but it get Last Gasped. After having found a Terrarion, I am finally able to get my green Honden on the battlefield, though my chances of winning via damage at this point are beyond unlikely.

Ty gets a second angel down, but it is crushed by a Chastise. Shard Phoenix #2 comes down to keep some pressure on.

I rip a Tidings for my turn, but only flip over a bunch of land and a Meishin, the Mind Cage. I do finally have double white for Reverence. Sadly, Ty gets the real pressure going by resolving a Searing Meditation. I have three draw steps to come up with a solution, but all I find are mana producers and Terror effects.

0-1        :(

A sad start, but I am still hopeful for the match.

I bring in everything but Horobi’s Whispers, while cutting some of the cards that do absolutely nothing (Exile in Darkness, Night of Souls Betrayal, Hideous Laughter).

Belated State Champs, Game 2:



Holy Crap on a Cracker! That's a keeper. Ty had to think for a minute (or run to the bathroom) before keeping.

My Terrarion comes down as the first play of the game Ty leads off with a Peace of Mind while I consult the necrosages, not using the terrarion to make sure I can Persecute next turn. An Island and Ribbons of Night join my hand as I ship it back. Ty discards an Angel to peace of mind before he plays a Boros Garrison.......and returns the garrison to his hand on accident (doh!). He digitally kicks himself, but I point out that it doesn't really matter as I persecute for white which gets me a Searing Meditation, Lightning Helix, and Ivory Mask, leaving him with his bounce land and a pair of phoenixes (phoeni?).  Ty tries to recover, but having drawn Underground River I can tutor for my win, and Ty doesn't draw a Terashi's Grasp in time.

1-1

We both keep our boards the same and head into the biggest game of our lives......or of this afternoon, really.

Belated State Champs, Game 3:

Sadly, MTGO did not save the replay of this one, so I am gonna have to go off of memory for this one.

Ty and I both mull to 6. I end up keeping a decent hand with 2 islands and Nightmare Void and a counterspell of some kind. Ty leads off with Pithing Needle naming Brainspoil. Ty and I both miss our third land drop, but he does manage to get a peace of mind down. My drawstep gave me a battle of wits, and if your gonna draw a nonland card, that's the one you want to draw. We both recover on our lands pretty quickly, but continue to stare at each other. I have drawn a second counter, so I'm content to play the waiting game for a while.

My fifth land finally comes and it is a swamp. I decide to fire off the nightmare void rather than just rawdog out the win. Ty thinks for a minute and hits me with a pair of helixes (heli? I'm just kidding!) before the nightmare resolves. My play is rewarded as Ty has a Grasp, which hits the yard, leaving him with a hand of helix and Phoenix x2. Ty drops a phoenix ands sends it back. Being at 14 and with him down a grasp, I go ahead and slam down the battle and dare him to get lucky. Ty draws for his turn, taps his boros garrison, another plains..........and casts searing meditation. At the beginning of my next upkeep, it's all over.

Whoo! After 5 years, I am finally the undisputed 2005 state champ! (I personally prefer to leave out the heavyweight part as I have worked hard to stay out of that weight class, tyvm.)

After some friendly smack talk and post game questions (Ty wanted to know if I still go for it without the Void, which I doubt I will as I can hide behind my counters for some time), I enjoy the celebrations and head to our message board to upload my new avatar  =D

What lessons can be learned from this match? What nuggets of information can the community mine and grow in their skills? .......Yeah, I got nothing on that front. Perhaps the lesson is that you shouldn't leave the true results of  a tournament hanging so you can watch your miserable baseball team get beaten around (Sorry guys, but there are so many disappointing seasons the 'stros can give me before I am done.) Or maybe the lesson is that there is fun to be had in magic without always having the largest stakes on the line. This match was a blast, and not in small part because some people I haven't even heard from lately took the time to go through multiple MTGO updates to watch the match and hang out. It was a little like having those good ole days of magic back for a small window in time.

Well, if I wasn't able to educate you in any way, I hope I was able to entertain you in some way. Next time I promise to have a more valuable piece for those of a tournament mind.

See y'all next year!

Keya

gamemaster32 on MTGO