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2021 Overwatch League season

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2021 Overwatch League season
LeagueOverwatch League
SportOverwatch
DurationApril 16 – August 21
September 4 – 25 (Playoffs)
Number of matches16
Number of teams20
TV partner(s)
Regular season
Top seedShanghai Dragons
Season MVPXin "Leave" Huang
Midseason tournament champions
May MeleeDallas Fuel
June JoustShanghai Dragons
Summer ShowdownShanghai Dragons
Countdown CupLos Angeles Gladiators
Grand Finals
VenueOnline
ChampionsShanghai Dragons
  Runners-upAtlanta Reign
Finals MVPLee "LIP" Jae-won
Overwatch League seasons

The 2021 Overwatch League season was the fourth season of the Overwatch League (OWL), a professional esports league for the video game Overwatch. The regular season began on April 16, 2021, and concluded on August 21. The season featured four midseason tournaments throughout the regular season along with a new point system for season playoff seeding. Similar to the 2020 season, teams are split into two geographical regions. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, most matches were played online, with the exception of several live events throughout the season. The season marks the second year of the Overwatch League's broadcast partnership with YouTube, their third with Sport1, and their first with Bilibili.

The postseason began on September 4 with two regional play-in tournaments acting as qualifiers for the season playoffs. The playoffs began on September 21 and culminated with the Grand Finals on September 25. The Shanghai Dragons won the Grand Finals over the Atlanta Reign to win their first OWL championship.

Format

[edit]

Regions and live events

[edit]

After all matches were rescheduled to be played strictly online due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 season saw the OWL divide teams into two regions, North America and Asia, in an effort to reduce lag due to online play. For the 2021 season, the twenty teams were divided into two regions, the East and West. Eight teams from China and South Korea competed in the East Region, while twelve teams from North America and Europe competed in the West Division.[1]

The majority of matches in the 2021 season were played online. Three live events were planned to be hosted by three teams in China: Hangzhou Spark in June, Shanghai Dragons in July, and Guangzhou Charge in August. All five China-based teams travelled to these events, while the three Korea-based teams played at the events remotely via the league's cloud server.[2] The Charge's homestand in August was cancelled, however, due to COVID-19 concerns.[3] Additionally, the Dallas Fuel hosted a homestand in July at Esports Stadium Arlington.[4]

Midseason tournaments

[edit]

The league expanded upon the tournament format that was introduced in the 2020 season. Four standalone tournaments, the May Melee, June Joust, Summer Showdown, and Countdown Cup, were spread throughout the regular season with teams from both regions competing against each other.[5] Hero pools, a system in which some heroes are unplayable, were used in two of the four tournaments: the June Joust and Countdown Cup. For each tournament, teams played four weeks of regional qualifier matches.[6] The top six teams from the West and the top four teams from the East advanced to regional knockout matches, and the top two teams from each region advanced from the knockouts to play in the interregional tournament.[7] In an effort to minimize lag, the qualifying Western teams traveled to the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa for each interregional tournament. The internet service provider at the University of Hawaii was directly connected to a cloud-based server in Tokyo, Japan via an underwater sea cable, while the qualifying Eastern teams did not travel anywhere and connected to the Tokyo server from Asia. With this setup, the league was able to equal latencies for all participating players with a "minimum-latency tool" developed by Activision.[8]

Season playoffs

[edit]

Contrasted to previous seasons, where playoff seeding was determined by teams' win–loss record throughout the regular season, the league implemented a point system, called League Points, to determine regular season standings. Every win in the regular season earned a team one point. A first-, second-, or third-place finish in each midseason tournament earned the placing team an additional three, two, or one point, respectively.[6] A total of eight teams advanced to the season playoffs: the top three teams from the West and the top two teams from the East, based on League Points, advanced directly to the season playoffs.[7] Seeds four through nine in the Western region and seeds three through five in the Eastern region in the advanced to their respective region's play-in tournament, with two teams from the West and one team from the East advancing to the season playoffs.[9]

Regular season

[edit]

The 2021 schedule was released on February 20, 2021, and the regular season began on April 16.[10]

East region
Pos Team Pld W L Pts PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Shanghai Dragons 16 12 4 20 0.750 38 19 2 +19 Advance to season playoffs
2 Chengdu Hunters 16 11 5 15 0.688 38 22 2 +16
3 Seoul Dynasty 16 12 4 12 0.750 40 22 0 +18 Advance to play-ins
4 Philadelphia Fusion 16 10 6 10 0.625 37 24 3 +13
5 Hangzhou Spark 16 7 9 7 0.438 32 31 0 +1
6 New York Excelsior 16 7 9 7 0.438 29 32 0 −3
7 Guangzhou Charge 16 5 11 5 0.313 20 38 4 −18
8 Los Angeles Valiant 16 0 16 0 0.000 2 48 1 −46
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) winning percentage (including tournaments); 3) regular season wins; 4) regular season map differential
West region
Pos Team Pld W L Pts PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Dallas Fuel 16 11 5 17 0.688 40 26 3 +14 Advance to season playoffs
2 Los Angeles Gladiators 16 11 5 14 0.688 41 21 0 +20
3 Atlanta Reign 16 11 5 13 0.688 41 21 0 +20
4 San Francisco Shock 16 12 4 12 0.750 43 24 2 +19 Advance to play-ins
5 Houston Outlaws 16 11 5 11 0.688 34 24 3 +10
6 Washington Justice 16 9 7 9 0.563 29 26 2 +3
7 Toronto Defiant 16 9 7 9 0.563 31 31 0 0
8 Paris Eternal 16 8 8 8 0.500 32 32 2 0
9 Boston Uprising 16 7 9 7 0.438 27 31 1 −4
10 Florida Mayhem 16 5 11 6 0.313 26 38 2 −12
11 London Spitfire 16 1 15 1 0.063 12 47 1 −35
12 Vancouver Titans 16 1 15 1 0.063 10 45 0 −35
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) winning percentage (including tournaments); 3) regular season wins; 4) regular season map differential

May Melee

[edit]

The May Melee was the first of four midseason tournaments of the season. Qualifiers began on April 16 and concluded on May 1. The regional knockouts began on May 2, and the May Melee tournament between the top two teams from each region began on May 7.[6]

Qualifiers

[edit]
East region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Philadelphia Fusion 4 4 0 1.00 12 3 0 +9 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Seoul Dynasty 4 3 1 0.75 10 3 0 +7
3 Chengdu Hunters 4 3 1 0.75 10 4 0 +6
4 Shanghai Dragons 4 3 1 0.75 9 5 1 +4
5 Hangzhou Spark 4 1 3 0.25 7 9 0 −2
6 Guangzhou Charge 4 1 3 0.25 3 9 1 −6
7 New York Excelsior 4 1 3 0.25 3 10 0 −7
8 Los Angeles Valiant 4 0 4 0.00 1 12 0 −11
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential
West region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Washington Justice 4 4 0 1.00 12 3 0 +9 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Houston Outlaws 4 4 0 1.00 12 5 1 +7
3 San Francisco Shock 4 3 1 0.75 11 6 1 +5
4 Florida Mayhem 4 3 1 0.75 9 6 0 +3
5 Toronto Defiant 4 3 1 0.75 9 7 0 +2
6 Dallas Fuel 4 2 2 0.50 9 7 0 +2
7 Los Angeles Gladiators 4 2 2 0.50 8 6 0 +2
8 Atlanta Reign 4 1 3 0.25 8 9 0 −1
9 Paris Eternal 4 1 3 0.25 5 10 0 −5
10 Boston Uprising 4 1 3 0.25 4 11 0 −7
11 Vancouver Titans 4 0 4 0.00 4 12 0 −8
12 London Spitfire 4 0 4 0.00 3 12 0 −9
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential

Regional knockouts

[edit]
East region
Semifinals
1Philadelphia Fusion2
4Shanghai Dragons3
2Seoul Dynasty1
3Chengdu Hunters3
West region
SemifinalsFinals
1Washington Justice1
4Florida Mayhem34Florida Mayhem3
5Toronto Defiant0
2Houston Outlaws0
3San Francisco Shock06Dallas Fuel3
6Dallas Fuel3

Tournament weekend

[edit]
Upper round 1Upper finalsFinals
W1Florida Mayhem2
E2Shanghai Dragons3
E2Shanghai Dragons2
W2Dallas Fuel3
E1Chengdu Hunters1
W2Dallas Fuel3
W2Dallas Fuel4
E2Shanghai Dragons2
Lower round 1Lower finals
E2Shanghai Dragons3
W1Florida Mayhem3W1Florida Mayhem0
E1Chengdu Hunters1

June Joust

[edit]

The June Joust was the second of four midseason tournaments of the season. For the tournament, four heroes were banned from all qualifying and tournament matches: Tracer, Sombra, Reinhardt, and Zenyatta.[11] Qualifiers began on May 21 and concluded on June 5. The regional knockouts began on June 6, and the May Melee tournament between the top two teams from each region began on June 11.[6]

Qualifiers

[edit]
East region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Hangzhou Spark 4 4 0 1.00 12 2 0 +10 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Shanghai Dragons 4 3 1 0.75 9 4 1 +5
3 Seoul Dynasty 4 3 1 0.75 10 6 0 +4
4 New York Excelsior 4 2 2 0.50 8 7 0 +1
5 Philadelphia Fusion 4 2 2 0.50 8 7 2 +1
6 Chengdu Hunters 4 1 3 0.25 6 10 1 −4
7 Guangzhou Charge 4 1 3 0.25 4 10 1 −6
8 Los Angeles Valiant 4 0 4 0.00 1 12 1 −11
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential
West region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Los Angeles Gladiators 4 4 0 1.00 12 3 0 +9 Advance to regional knockouts
2 San Francisco Shock 4 4 0 1.00 12 4 1 +8
3 Atlanta Reign 4 3 1 0.75 10 4 0 +6
4 Houston Outlaws 4 3 1 0.75 10 5 0 +5
5 Dallas Fuel 4 3 1 0.75 10 5 1 +5
6 Boston Uprising 4 2 2 0.50 9 6 0 +3
7 Paris Eternal 4 2 2 0.50 8 8 2 0
8 Washington Justice 4 1 3 0.25 5 9 2 −4
9 Florida Mayhem 4 1 3 0.25 6 10 0 −4
10 Toronto Defiant 4 1 3 0.25 5 10 0 −5
11 London Spitfire 4 0 4 0.00 1 12 0 −11
12 Vancouver Titans 4 0 4 0.00 0 12 0 −12
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential

Regional knockouts

[edit]
East region
Semifinals
1Hangzhou Spark1
4New York Excelsior3
2Shanghai Dragons3
3Seoul Dynasty0
West region
SemifinalsFinals
1Los Angeles Gladiators1
4Houston Outlaws05Dallas Fuel3
5Dallas Fuel3
2San Francisco Shock0
3Atlanta Reign33Atlanta Reign3
6Boston Uprising0

Tournament weekend

[edit]
Upper round 1Upper finalsFinals
W1Atlanta Reign3
E2New York Excelsior0
W1Atlanta Reign1
W2Dallas Fuel3
E1Shanghai Dragons0
W2Dallas Fuel3
W2Dallas Fuel3
E1Shanghai Dragons4
Lower round 1Lower finals
W1Atlanta Reign0
E2New York Excelsior0E1Shanghai Dragons3
E1Shanghai Dragons3

Summer Showdown

[edit]

The Summer Showdown was the third of four midseason tournaments of the season. Qualifiers began on June 25 and concluded on July 10. The regional knockouts began on July 11, and the tournament began on July 16.[6]

Qualifiers

[edit]
East region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Shanghai Dragons 4 4 0 1.00 12 1 0 +11 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Chengdu Hunters 4 3 1 0.75 10 5 0 +5
3 Seoul Dynasty 4 3 1 0.75 9 6 0 +3
4 New York Excelsior 4 2 2 0.50 10 7 0 +3
5 Hangzhou Spark 4 2 2 0.50 7 8 0 −1
6 Philadelphia Fusion 4 1 3 0.25 6 9 1 −3
7 Guangzhou Charge 4 1 3 0.25 5 11 1 −6
8 Los Angeles Valiant 4 0 4 0.00 0 12 0 −12
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential
West region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Dallas Fuel 4 4 0 1.00 12 5 1 +7 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Atlanta Reign 4 3 1 0.75 11 3 0 +8
3 Boston Uprising 4 3 1 0.75 9 4 1 +5
4 Washington Justice 4 3 1 0.75 9 5 0 +4
5 Paris Eternal 4 3 1 0.75 10 6 0 +4
6 Los Angeles Gladiators 4 2 2 0.50 10 8 0 +2
7 San Francisco Shock 4 2 2 0.50 9 9 0 0
8 Houston Outlaws 4 2 2 0.50 6 7 1 −1
9 Toronto Defiant 4 2 2 0.50 7 8 0 −1
10 Florida Mayhem 4 0 4 0.00 4 12 1 −8
11 London Spitfire 4 0 4 0.00 3 12 0 −9
12 Vancouver Titans 4 0 4 0.00 1 12 0 −11
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential

Regional knockouts

[edit]
East region
Semifinals
1Shanghai Dragons3
4New York Excelsior0
2Chengdu Hunters3
3Seoul Dynasty2
West region
SemifinalsFinals
1Dallas Fuel3
4Washington Justice34Washington Justice2
5Paris Eternal2
2Atlanta Reign3
3Boston Uprising06Los Angeles Gladiators2
6Los Angeles Gladiators3

Tournament weekend

[edit]
Upper round 1Upper finalsFinals
W1Dallas Fuel1
E2Chengdu Hunters3
E2Chengdu Hunters2
E1Shanghai Dragons3
E1Shanghai Dragons3
W2Atlanta Reign0
E1Shanghai Dragons4
E2Chengdu Hunters1
Lower round 1Lower finals
E2Chengdu Hunters3
W1Dallas Fuel3W1Dallas Fuel0
W2Atlanta Reign2

Countdown Cup

[edit]

The Countdown Cup was the last of four midseason tournaments of the season. For the tournament, four heroes were banned from all qualifying and tournament matches: Echo, Ashe, Sigma, and Lúcio.[12] Qualifiers began on July 30 and concluded on August 14. The regional knockouts take place on August 15, and the tournament began on August 19.[6]

Qualifiers

[edit]
East region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Chengdu Hunters 4 4 0 1.00 12 3 1 +9 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Philadelphia Fusion 4 3 1 0.75 11 5 0 +6
3 Seoul Dynasty 4 3 1 0.75 11 7 0 +4
4 New York Excelsior 4 2 2 0.50 8 8 0 0
5 Guangzhou Charge 4 2 2 0.50 8 8 1 0
6 Shanghai Dragons 4 2 2 0.50 8 9 0 −1
7 Hangzhou Spark 4 0 4 0.00 6 12 0 −6
8 Los Angeles Valiant 4 0 4 0.00 0 12 0 −12
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential
West region
Pos Team Pld W L PCT MW ML MT MD Qualification
1 Atlanta Reign 4 4 0 1.00 12 5 0 +7 Advance to regional knockouts
2 Los Angeles Gladiators 4 3 1 0.75 11 4 0 +7
3 San Francisco Shock 4 3 1 0.75 11 5 0 +6
4 Toronto Defiant 4 3 1 0.75 10 6 0 +4
5 Paris Eternal 4 2 2 0.50 9 8 0 +1
6 Dallas Fuel 4 2 2 0.50 9 9 1 0
7 Houston Outlaws 4 2 2 0.50 6 7 1 −1
8 Florida Mayhem 4 1 3 0.25 7 10 1 −3
9 Vancouver Titans 4 1 3 0.25 5 9 0 −4
10 Boston Uprising 4 1 3 0.25 5 10 0 −5
11 London Spitfire 4 1 3 0.25 5 11 1 −6
12 Washington Justice 4 1 3 0.25 3 9 0 −6
Source: The Overwatch League
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) map differential; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head map differential

Regional knockouts

[edit]
East region
Semifinals
1Chengdu Hunters3
4New York Excelsior1
2Philadelphia Fusion1
3Seoul Dynasty3
West region
SemifinalsFinals
1Atlanta Reign3
4Toronto Defiant34Toronto Defiant1
5Paris Eternal2
2Los Angeles Gladiators3
3San Francisco Shock33San Francisco Shock2
6Dallas Fuel0

Tournament weekend

[edit]
Upper round 1Upper finalsFinals
W1Atlanta Reign3
E2Seoul Dynasty1
W1Atlanta Reign0
W2Los Angeles Gladiators3
E1Chengdu Hunters2
W2Los Angeles Gladiators3
W2Los Angeles Gladiators4
E1Chengdu Hunters3
Lower round 1Lower finals
W1Atlanta Reign0
E1Chengdu Hunters3E1Chengdu Hunters3
E2Seoul Dynasty0

Postseason

[edit]

Play-in tournaments

[edit]

The play-in tournaments were two regional single-elimination tournaments that took place September 4–5 and advanced two Western teams and one Eastern team to the season playoffs. In the Western region, seeds four through nine, based on regular season standings, advanced to the Western play-in tournament. The first round was contested by seeds six through nine, with the sixth seed selecting either the eighth or ninth seed as their opponent. The winners of the first round advanced to the finals, with the fourth seed choosing their opponent from the winners of the first round. In the Eastern region, seeds three through five, based on regular season standings, advanced to the Eastern play-in tournament. The fourth and fifth seed competed in the first round, and the winner of the first round faced the third seed in the final. In both regions, the winner of the finals advanced to the season playoffs.[9]

Brackets

[edit]
East region
Semifinals
September 5
Finals
September 5
3Seoul Dynasty1
4Philadelphia Fusion34Philadelphia Fusion3
5Hangzhou Spark1
West region
Semifinals
September 4
Finals
September 5
4San Francisco Shock3
6Washington Justice37Toronto Defiant0
8Paris Eternal0
5Houston Outlaws2
7Toronto Defiant36Washington Justice3
9Boston Uprising0

Playoffs

[edit]

The playoffs were a double-elimination tournament contested by eight teams – five from the West region and three from the East region.[7] All matches in season playoffs, aside from the final match, took place from September 21 to 24. The final two teams remaining in the tournament advanced to the Grand Finals, which took place on September 25. Playoff matches, aside from the Grand Finals, were planned to take place live at Esports Stadium Arlington in Arlington, Texas, while the Grand Finals was planned to take place at the Galen Center in Los Angeles, California;[13] however, the OWL announced on August 25, 2021, that all playoff matches, including the Grand Finals, would not be played in a live format due to increasing risks of COVID-19 and the Delta variant.[14] Instead, the West region playoff teams travelled to the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, while the East region teams played in their home country, to minimize latency between competing teams.[15]

Bracket

[edit]
Upper round 1
September 21
Upper round 2
September 22
Upper final
September 23
Grand Finals
September 25
1Shanghai Dragons3
6San Francisco Shock0
1Shanghai Dragons3
4Los Angeles Gladiators1
4Los Angeles Gladiators3
7Philadelphia Fusion1
1Shanghai Dragons3
2Dallas Fuel1
2Dallas Fuel3
8Washington Justice1
2Dallas Fuel3
3Chengdu Hunters0
3Chengdu Hunters3
5Atlanta Reign21Shanghai Dragons4
5Atlanta Reign0
Lower round 1
September 22
Lower round 2
September 23
Lower round 3
September 24
Lower final
September 24
3Chengdu Hunters2
6San Francisco Shock36San Francisco Shock32Dallas Fuel1
7Philadelphia Fusion26San Francisco Shock15Atlanta Reign3
5Atlanta Reign3
4Los Angeles Gladiators2
5Atlanta Reign35Atlanta Reign3
8Washington Justice0

Notable events

[edit]

Chinese teams boycott Saebyeolbe

[edit]

On April 12, 2021, while streaming on Twitch, Seoul Dynasty player Park "Saebyeolbe" Jong-ryeol commented about frustration trying to appeal to a Chinese audience while streaming on the Chinese streaming platform DouYu. In an English translation, Park said during his Twitch stream, "I can't say Taiwan and [Hong Kong]. At all. They (China) don't recognize them as countries. I got into so much trouble for saying their names. Make it make sense. What are you talking about, 'One China?' So I objected to that and all the managers said, 'If you want to earn Chinese money, you have to become a Chinese dog.' So that's what I'm doing right now. I can even say, 'Thanks for subscribing' in Chinese. Aren't I good at Chinese?"[16]

Two days after the comments, Park apologized via a handwritten note on Instagram. Nearly three weeks after the apology, the four Chinese teams of the Overwatch League — the Shanghai Dragons, Chengdu Hunters, Hangzhou Spark, and Guangzhou Charge — announced that they would not participate in any Overwatch League event in which Park was present.[16] On May 6, 2021, the Overwatch League issued a statement announcing that the Chinese teams would no longer be boycotting Park nor the Seoul Dynasty.[17] As of August 18, 2021, Park has not appeared in a match since the incident.[18]

Soft salary cap investigation

[edit]

In July 2021, Dot Esports reported that the Civil Conduct Task Force of the United States Department of Justice antitrust division was investigating whether or not the league's soft salary cap policy violated the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, as the player's are not unionized. The league's soft salary cap per team in 2020 was US$1.6 million, and if a team went over that amount, they would have to pay additional money to the league, which would be distributed to other teams.[19][20] In October 2021, Sports Business Journal reported that the OWL would be eliminating their competitive balance tax and maximum salary caps.[21]

League sponsorship pulled

[edit]

In July 2021, the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) filed a lawsuit against Activision Blizzard for sexual harassment and discrimination taking place within the Blizzard workplace.[18] Two weeks after the filing, Overwatch League partners Coca-Cola, Kellogg's, State Farm, and T-Mobile announced that they would be reassessing their partnership with the league, and all branding of the aforementioned companies were removed from the league's website.[22] Later, Kellogg's stated they "will not be moving forward" with their sponsorship of the Overwatch League.[23] Additionally, Sports Business Journal observed that IBM's branding was removed from all Overwatch League media, including the league's official partners' page and power rankings.[24] In mid-August 2021, the only sponsor present during Overwatch League broadcasts was voice-over-Internet Protocol software company TeamSpeak.[18]

Awards

[edit]

Individual awards

[edit]
Award Recipient
Most Valuable Player (MVP) Xin "Leave" Huang (Chengdu Hunters)[25]
Dennis Hawelka Award Kim "Sp9rk1e" Yeong-han (Dallas Fuel)[26]
Rookie of the Year Oh "Pelican" Se-hyun (Atlanta Reign)[27]
Coach of the Year Yun "RUSH" Hee-won (Dallas Fuel)[27]
Grand Finals MVP Lee "LIP" Jae-won (Shanghai Drahons)[28]

Role Stars

[edit]
Damage Tank Support
Xin "Leave" Huang (Chengdu Hunters) Lee "Fearless" Eui-seok (Dallas Fuel) Kim "Shu" Jin-seo (Los Angeles Gladiators)
Kim "SP9RK1E" Young-han (Dallas Fuel) Choi "Hanbin" Han-been (Dallas Fuel) Kim "Izayaki" Min-chul (Shanghai Dragons)
Lee "LIP" Jae-won (Shanghai Dragons) Kang "Void" Jung-woo (Shanghai Dragons) Joon "Fielder" Kwon (Dallas Fuel)
Kevin "Kevster" Persson (Los Angeles Gladiators) Indy "Space" Halpern (Los Angeles Gladiators) Lee "Leejaegon" Jae-gon (Shanghai Dragons)

Source:[29]

Media

[edit]

The season marked the second year of the Overwatch League's the three-year broadcast contract with YouTube, which did not include broadcast rights for China.[30][31] For the 2021 season, YouTube introduced clipping functionality for their videos and allowed OWL games to be rendered in 4K resolution.[32]

Under a new, multi-year contract, Bilibili obtained production and broadcast rights in China. Bilibili has a similar deal with Riot Games' League of Legends international competitions and, prior to the deal with the Overwatch League, secured hosting rights for Overwatch Contenders and Overwatch Open Division in China.[33] Activision Blizzard renewed a deal for TV-exclusive rights to the Overwatch League in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland with Sport1; the multi-year contract was signed after their two-year deal with Sport1 concluded.[34]

Winnings

[edit]

Teams in the 2021 season competed for a total prize pool of US$4,250,000 across midseason tournaments and playoffs,[35] with the payout division detailed below.[36]

May Melee
Pos Team Bonus
1 Dallas Fuel $100,000
2 Shanghai Dragons $70,000
3 Florida Mayhem $35,000
4 Chengdu Hunters $20,000
June Joust
Pos Team Bonus
1 Shanghai Dragons $100,000
2 Dallas Fuel $70,000
3 Atlanta Reign $35,000
4 New York Excelsior $20,000
Summer Showdown
Pos Team Bonus
1 Shanghai Dragons $100,000
2 Chengdu Hunters $70,000
3 Dallas Fuel $35,000
4 Atlanta Reign $20,000
Countdown Cup
Pos Team Bonus
1 Los Angeles Gladiators $100,000
2 Chengdu Hunters $70,000
3 Atlanta Reign $35,000
4 Seoul Dynasty $20,000
Season playoffs
Pos Team Bonus
1 Shanghai Dragons $1,500,000
2 Atlanta Reign $700,000
3 Dallas Fuel $350,000
4 San Francisco Shock $250,000
5 Chengdu Hunters $150,000
6 Los Angeles Gladiators $150,000
7 Philadelphia Fusion $50,000
8 Washington Justice $50,000

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Amenabar, Teddy (January 14, 2021). "Overwatch League wants to 'level-up' online matches, tournaments for 2021 season". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  2. ^ Webster, Andrew (April 14, 2021). "The Overwatch League is bringing back some live matches with a trio of events in China". The Verge. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  3. ^ Michael, Cale (June 21, 2021). "Guangzhou Charge and Overwatch League cancel Countdown Cup Homestand due to COVID-19 concerns". Dot Esports. Retrieved June 22, 2021.
  4. ^ Stern, Adam (June 14, 2021). "Dallas Fuel Homestand at Esports Stadium Arlington in July Will Have Audience". The Esports Observer. Retrieved June 22, 2021.
  5. ^ Richardson, Liz (January 14, 2021). "Overwatch League announces 2021 season structure, will begin in April". Dot Esports. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Richardson, Liz (February 20, 2021). "The Overwatch League returns on April 16". Dot Esports. Retrieved February 24, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Garcia, Ethan (April 13, 2021). "How to watch the 2021 Overwatch League season". Dot Esports. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  8. ^ Bumbaca, Chris (April 14, 2021). "Aloha! How esports Overwatch League discovered Hawaii was key to 2021 in-season tournaments". USA Today. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  9. ^ a b "OWL 2021 Playoffs". The Overwatch League. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  10. ^ Bumbaca, Chris (February 20, 2021). "Overwatch League releases 2021 season schedule: 6 games to look forward to". USA Today. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  11. ^ Garcia, Ethan (May 13, 2021). "Overwatch League unveils format changes for June Joust". Dot Esports. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
  12. ^ Richardson, Liz (July 21, 2021). "Overwatch League Countdown Cup Hero Pools revealed". Dot Esports. Retrieved July 22, 2021.
  13. ^ Chalk, Andy (July 20, 2021). "Overwatch League is bringing back live events in September". PC Gamer. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  14. ^ Collins, Sean (August 25, 2021). "Overwatch League playoffs no longer in North Texas, moving back to online". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved August 25, 2021.
  15. ^ Richardson, Liz (August 25, 2021). "Overwatch League cancels live postseason events due to COVID-19 delta variant concerns". Dot Esports. Retrieved August 25, 2021.
  16. ^ a b Parrish, Ash (May 5, 2021). "Chinese Overwatch Teams Threaten Boycott Of Korean Player For Statements On Taiwan And Hong Kong". Kotaku. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  17. ^ Amenabar, Teddy; Liao, Shannon (May 6, 2021). "China's Overwatch League teams end boycott of South Korean player who criticized 'One China' policy". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  18. ^ a b c Parrish, Ash (August 18, 2021). "The Overwatch League's 2021 regular season was full of drama amid an uncertain future". The Verge. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
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