Call of Duty World League

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Call of Duty World League
SportCall of Duty (Call of Duty: Black Ops III, Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare)
Founded2016
FounderSue Shat
Owner(s)Nordan Shat
No. of teams16 Teams (9 in North America, 6 in Europe, 1 in Australia/New Zealand)
ContinentsNorth America, Europe, New Zealand/Australia
Most recent
champion(s)
Spark CWL (EU), Millenium (EU), Plantronics Mindfreak (ANZ)
Sponsor(s)Playstation 4
Official websitewww.callofduty.com/esports

The Call of Duty World League is a Call of Duty eSports league that began in January 2016.[1] It is played on Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare for PlayStation 4 and acts as a qualifier for the pre-existing, annual Call of Duty Championship. There are two divisions of play, a Professional division and an Amateur division, with the top teams of both qualifying for the championships. A total of $3 million USD of prize money will be given out throughout the year, with the annual Call of Duty Championships handing out $1.6 million. The 2016 Winner was Rayan Mendelsohn from Cloud9 (eSports) [2] The league was originally slated to begin on January 5 but was delayed a week for "issues beyond our control", some of which may have stemmed from the previous night's PlayStation Network outage.[3] The COD World League officially kicked off on January 13.[4]

Teams

Stage 1 Teams
Teams Founded Manager(s)
North America
Splyce
Mindfreak
FaZe Clan 2010 Nordan Shat
Cloud9
eUnited
Luminosity Gaming 2015 Steve "Buyaka" Maida
OpTic Gaming 2006 Hector "H3CZ" Rodriguez Jr.
Rise Nation 2014 Kahreem "BombeR" Horsley
Millenium
Team EnVyUs 2007 Mike "Hastr0" Rufail
Epsilon eSports

Black Ops 3 Season 2

start
*Teams are sorted by W/L ratio then their Map Win %
North American Season 2 Rankings
Place Team W L Map Win %
1 Team EnVyUs 16 6 61.9%
2 OpTic Gaming 16 6 ?
5 Cloud9 13 9 54.0%
6 Dream Team 11 11 50.6%
7 Luminosity Gaming 11 11 49.4%
8 H2K-Gaming 11 11 49.4%
9 eLevate 11 11 48.3%
10 Complexity Gaming 8 14 39.0%
11 TSM 5 17 31.7%
12 100 Thieves 4 18 32.2%

Black Ops 3 Season 1

start
*Teams are sorted by W/L ratio then their Map Win %
North American Season 1 Rankings
Place Team W L Map Win %
1 OpTic Gaming 20 2 76.8%
2 Rise Nation 16 6 63.5%
3 Faze Clan 15 7 59.8%
4 eLevate 13 9 51.6%
5 Team EnVyUs 11 11 53.1%
6 Complexity Gaming 10 11 44.8%
7 Luminosity Gaming 9 12 47.7%
8 TSM 9 13 40.4%
9 Team Kaliber 8 14 40.5%
10 Dream Team 7 15 42.6%
11 H2K-Gaming 7 15 38.0%
12 Counter Logic Gaming 6 16 42.5%


Season 1 commenced on January 13, 2016 and was the first ever season of the Call of Duty World league; the league suffered a one-week delay due to "issues out of [our] control" and was suspected to be because of PlayStation Network outages. The season lasted 11 weeks and took place in North America, Australia and Europe, with teams from all regions fighting for play-off spots in their region at the end of the season. On 19 March 2016, the Australian regional play-off commenced where four teams battled it out for a prize pool of $118,000 AUD. On 27 March 2016, Mindfreak beat Tainted Minds 4-0 to grab first place in their region, winning $44,000. A week later, the EU regional play-offs commenced with six teams vying for $168,000. On 28 March 2016, Millenium beat Splyce 4-1 to win their regional play-off and walked away with $52,000. The final regional match was for the North American region, which commenced on 2 April 2016. It included eight teams and a prize pool of $218,000. On 3 April 2016 Optic Gaming beat Rise Nation 4-3 to walk away with $66,000. All teams who made it to their regional play-off also secured a place in Season 2, which began on Tuesday 19 April 2016.

References

  1. ^ Porter, Matt (September 24, 2015). "Call of Duty World League Announced". IGN. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  2. ^ Lingle, Samuel (Sep 24, 2015). "Activision will operate its own Call of Duty pro league". Charlie Intel.
  3. ^ "Call of Duty World League kickoff delayed by one week". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Call of Duty: World League kicks off today with $3M in prizes". VG247.com. Retrieved 31 March 2016.