One of the longest-standing and dominant orgs in VCT history is returning to the summit of VALORANT competition.
Fnatic secured its spot in the VCT: Masters Toronto Grand Finals after a victory over Wolves on Saturday. Coming up from the lower bracket, Fnatic will face Paper Rex for a chance at claiming the trophy.
Defeating Wolves seemed easy for Fnatic — the legacy European organization took a relatively comfortable 3-1 win over the Chinese team, in a match where the latter struggled throughout. The result can likely be attributed, at least in part, to the fact that this was Wolves’ first major international tournament, while Fnatic — and its players — are veterans at this level of competition.
Jake "Boaster" Howlett and his teammates are heading back to an international final, nearly a year after their last Grand Finals appearance — their victory at Masters Tokyo over Evil Geniuses. This time, however, their journey wasn’t easy. Fnatic had to pull off an impressive lower bracket run with four consecutive victories to reach tomorrow's decisive match.
A Painful Start for Wolves
On the first map, Fnatic dominated from the outset, delivering a near-perfect attacking half while Wolves seemed completely overwhelmed by the occasion. After the side switch, the Chinese team mounted an impressive response with six straight rounds, but Fnatic quickly shut down the comeback, thanks in large part to a strong showing from Timofey "Chronicle" Khromov on Viper. The European favorites went on to take the first map of the series.
Wolves couldn’t maintain their momentum, and the shift to Icebox proved difficult. Already struggling on defense, a surprise clutch from Kajetan "Kaajak" Haremski's Jett all but buried the Chinese squad for the rest of the map. Despite tactical pauses and the side change, Wolves managed to take only four rounds in total, allowing Fnatic to extend their lead to 2-0 in the series.
A Short-Lived Resurgence
It wasn’t until Lotus that Wolves showed signs of life. In a much closer contest, both teams reached halftime tied at 6-6. It took all the talent of Liu "Spring" Jiunting on Viper for Wolves to overcome Fnatic and get on the scoreboard, winning a narrow 13-10 map. Spring finished the map with 26 kills and 11 deaths— well ahead of Fnatic's highest scorer.
Ultimately, Lotus turned out to be just a brief resurgence for Wolves, who largely failed to make their mark in this best-of-five series. With Emir "Alfajer" Ali Beder shining on his comfort pick, Chamber, Fnatic cruised through Ascent to claim their third point. A dominant 13-5 scoreline sealed the lower bracket final and booked Fnatic's place in the grand final of the Masters Toronto.
Header Credit Photo: Stefan Wisnoski/Riot Games