Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

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2005 Pro Tour season
Pro Player of the Year
Japan Kenji Tsumura
Rookie of the Year
France Pierre Canali
World Champion
Japan Katsuhiro Mori
Pro Tours7
Grands Prix31
Hall of Fame inductions
Jon Finkel
Darwin Kastle
Alan Comer
Tommi Hovi
Olle Råde
Start of season10 September 2004
End of season4 December 2005


The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini. It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus, Nagoya, Atlanta, Philadelphia, London, Los Angeles, and Yokohama. At the end of the season Kenji Tsumura was proclaimed Pro Player of the year as the first Japanese player. Also the first class of the Hall of Fame was inducted. The inductees were Jon Finkel, Darwin Kastle, Tommi Hovi, Alan Comer, and Olle Råde.




Contents





  • 1 Grand Prixs – Rimini, Vienna, Austin


  • 2 Pro Tour – Columbus (29–31 October 2004)

    • 2.1 Tournament data


    • 2.2 Top 8


    • 2.3 Final standings


    • 2.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 3 Grand Prixs – Helsinki, Brisbane, Yokohama, Porto Alegre, Paris, Chicago, Osaka


  • 4 Pro Tour – Nagoya (28–30 January 2005)

    • 4.1 Tournament data


    • 4.2 Top 8


    • 4.3 Final standings


    • 4.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 5 Grand Prixs – Boston, Eindhoven, Seattle


  • 6 Pro Tour – Atlanta (11–13 March 2005)

    • 6.1 Tournament data


    • 6.2 Top 4


    • 6.3 Final standings


    • 6.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 7 Grand Prixs – Singapore, Leipzig, Lisbon, Detroit


  • 8 Pro Tour – Philadelphia (6–8 May 2005)

    • 8.1 Tournament data


    • 8.2 Top 8


    • 8.3 Final standings


    • 8.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 9 Grand Prixs – Matsuyama, Bologna


  • 10 Pro Tour – London (8–10 July 2005)

    • 10.1 Tournament data


    • 10.2 Top 8


    • 10.3 Final standings


    • 10.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 11 Grand Prixs – Minneapolis, Niigata, Taipei, Salt Lake City, Mexico City, Nottingham


  • 12 Pro Tour – Los Angeles (28–30 October 2005)

    • 12.1 Tournament data


    • 12.2 Top 8


    • 12.3 Final standings


    • 12.4 Pro Player of the year standings



  • 13 Grand Prixs – Melbourne, Copenhagen, Kitakyuushuu, Philadelphia, Bilbao, Beijing


  • 14 2005 World Championships – Yokohama (30 November – 4 December 2005)

    • 14.1 Tournament data


    • 14.2 Top 8


    • 14.3 Final standings


    • 14.4 National team competition



  • 15 Pro Player of the year final standings


  • 16 References




Grand Prixs – Rimini, Vienna, Austin










Pro Tour – Columbus (29–31 October 2004)


Pierre Canali from France won the inaugural Pro Tour of the season, which was also the first Pro Tour he attended. His deck was an aggressive all-artifact deck called "Affinity". For the first time Japan had three players amongst the final eight while the USA had in the Top 8 for the first time in three Pro Tours.[1]



Tournament data


Prize pool: $200,130

Players: 286

Format: Extended

Head Judge: Jaap Brouwer[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1

Pierre Canali

3
8
Geoffrey Siron
1

Pierre Canali

3

Olivier Ruel
2
5
Masashi Oiso
0
4

Olivier Ruel

3

Pierre Canali

3

Shuhei Nakamura
0
2

Nicholas West

3
7
Ryuichi Arita
0
Nicholas West
0


Shuhei Nakamura

3
3
Gadiel Szleifer
1
6

Shuhei Nakamura

3


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

France Pierre Canali
$30,000
25
Pro Tour debut
2

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
$20,000
20

3

United Kingdom Nicholas West
$15,000
16
Pro Tour debut
4

France Olivier Ruel
$13,000
16
3rd Final day
5

United States Gadiel Szleifer
$9,000
12

6

Japan Masashi Oiso
$8,500
12
4th Final day
7

Japan Ryuichi Arita
$8,000
12
2nd Final day
8

Belgium Geoffrey Siron
$7,500
12


Pro Player of the year standings


























Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

France Pierre Canali
25
2

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
20
3

France Olivier Ruel
18
4

United Kingdom Nicholas West
16
5

Japan Ryuichi Arita
12

Japan Masashi Oiso
12

Belgium Geoffrey Siron
12

United States Gadiel Szleifer
12


Grand Prixs – Helsinki, Brisbane, Yokohama, Porto Alegre, Paris, Chicago, Osaka
























Pro Tour – Nagoya (28–30 January 2005)


Pro Tour Nagoya was the last Pro Tour employing the Rochester Draft format. Shu Komuro from Japan defeated Anton Jonsson in the finals to win the tournament.[3]



Tournament data


Prize pool: $200,130

Players: 236

Format: Rochester Draft (Champions of Kamigawa)

Head Judge: Collin Jackson[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1
Masashiro Kuroda
1
8

Anton Jonsson

3

Anton Jonsson

3

Terry Soh
1
5
Frank Karsten
1
4

Terry Soh

3
Anton Jonsson
1


Shu Komuro

3
2
Jarno Harkonen
1
7

Murray Evans

3
Murray Evans
1


Shu Komuro

3
3
Vasilis Fatouros
1
6

Shu Komuro

3


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

Japan Shu Komuro
$30,000
25

2

Sweden Anton Jonsson
$20,000
20
5th Final day
3

Malaysia Terry Soh
$15,000
16
2nd Final day
4

Canada Murray Evans
$13,000
16
2nd Final day
5

Japan Masashiro Kuroda
$9,500
12
2nd Final day
6

Netherlands Frank Karsten
$8,500
12

7

Finland Jarno Harkonen
$7,500
12

8

Greece Vasilis Fatouros
$6,500
12
1st Greek in a Top 8


Pro Player of the year standings




















Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

Japan Shu Komuro
31
2

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
30
3

France Pierre Canali
28
4

France Olivier Ruel
27
5

Sweden Anton Jonsson
23


Grand Prixs – Boston, Eindhoven, Seattle










Pro Tour – Atlanta (11–13 March 2005)


The Canadian French cooperation team "Nova" won Pro Tour Atlanta, defeating the American team "We Add" in the final. "Nova" consisted of Gabriel Tsang, David Rood, and Gabriel Nassif. For Nassif it was the first Pro Tour victory after five previous final day appearances including three second places.[4] Atlanta was the last Pro Tour using the three-person team Limited format, although it was still used for the team competition at the World Championship that year and the next.



Tournament data


Players: 357 (119 teams)

Prize Pool: $200,100

Format: Team Kamigawa Block Sealed (Champions of Kamigawa, Betrayers of Kamigawa) – first day, Team Kamigawa Block Rochester Draft (Champions of Kamigawa-Betrayers of Kamigawa) – final two days

Head Judge: Sheldon Menery[2]



Top 4






















































Semifinals
Semi-finals
      
1
Les baltringues de Ludipia
0
4

We Add

2
We add
0


Nova

2
3
One Spin
1
2

Nova

2


Final standings
























































Place
Team
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1
Nova

Canada Gabriel Tsang
$60,000
20
3rd Final day

Canada David Rood
20
2nd Final day

France Gabriel Nassif
20
6th Final day
2
We Add

United States Don Smith
$30,000
16
Pro Tour debut

United States Andrew Pacifico
16


United States Adam Chambers
16

3
Les baltringues de Ludipia

France Benjamin Caumes
$18,000
12
2nd Final day

France Nicolas Bornarel
12


France Camille Fenet
12

4
One Spin

Japan Tomohiro Kaji
$15,000
12


Japan Kenji Tsumura
12


Japan Tomoharu Saitou
12


Pro Player of the year standings



















Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

Japan Shu Komuro
39
2

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
32
3

France Pierre Canali
31

France Olivier Ruel
31
5

Japan Masashi Oiso
29


Grand Prixs – Singapore, Leipzig, Lisbon, Detroit

















Pro Tour – Philadelphia (6–8 May 2005)


Pro Tour Philadelphia featured a tournament system different from those of other Pro Tours. While Swiss system was still used all players with three or more losses and/or draws were automatically dropped from the tournament. Prizes were given out not in relation to the final standings, but for the individual matches won, where matches in later rounds of the tournament were worth more than those in the earlier rounds.[5] It was also announced in the week prior to Pro Tour Philadelphia, that the end of the year payout based on Pro Points would be dropped after the season in favor of the Pro Club. Under the new system a player would receive special benefits based on the total amount of Pro Points he had acquired in a season.[6]


16-year-old Gadiel Szleifer defeated 18-year-old Kenji Tsumura in the final to win the tournament. Szleifer played a control deck built around Gifts Ungiven.[7] Former Pro Player of the year Kai Budde received a lot of attention for being undefeated after day one, but was eliminated after he picked up three losses in the first three rounds of day two.[8]



Tournament data


Players: 311

Prize Pool: $194,898

Format: Kamigawa Block Constructed (Champions of Kamigawa, Betrayers of Kamigawa)

Head Judge: Mike Guptil[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1

Steven Wolfman

3
8
André Müller
2
Steven Wolfman
0


Gadiel Szleifer

3
5
Jeff Novekoff
1
4

Gadiel Szleifer

3

Gadiel Szleifer

3

Kenji Tsumura
2
3
Ryan Cimera
2
6

Kenji Tsumura

3

Kenji Tsumura

3

Olivier Ruel
0
7

Olivier Ruel

3
2
Mark Herberholz
1


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

United States Gadiel Szleifer
$21,725
25
2nd Final day
2

Japan Kenji Tsumura
$12,275
20
2nd Final day
3

Canada Steven Wolfman
$7,475
16
2nd Final day
4

France Olivier Ruel
$6,950
16
4th Final day
5

United States Ryan Cimera
$2,825
12
Pro Tour debut
6

United States Jeff Novekoff
$4,750
12
Pro Tour debut
7

United States Mark Herberholz
$3,175
12
2nd Final day
8

Germany André Müller
$2,075
12


Pro Player of the year standings




















Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

France Olivier Ruel
49
2

United States Gadiel Szleifer
47
3

Japan Shu Komuro
45
4

Japan Kenji Tsumura
44
5

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
40


Grand Prixs – Matsuyama, Bologna










Pro Tour – London (8–10 July 2005)


Geoffrey Siron from Belgium won Pro Tour London, defeating Tsuyoshi Fujita in the finals. In the Top 8 Siron did not lose a single game.[9]



Tournament data


Players: 314

Prize Pool: $200,130

Format: Booster Draft (Champions of Kamigawa-Betrayers of Kamigawa-Saviors of Kamigawa)

Head Judge: Jaap Brouwer[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1

Antti Malin

3
8
Tomi Walamies
1
Antti Malin
1


Tsuyoshi Fujita

3
5
Arnost Zidek
2
4

Tsuyoshi Fujita

3
Tsuyoshi Fujita
0


Geoffrey Siron

3
2
David Larsson
1
7

Johan Sadeghpour

3
Johan Sadeghpour
0


Geoffrey Siron

3
3
Masashi Oiso
0
6

Geoffrey Siron

3


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

Belgium Geoffrey Siron
$30,000
25
2nd Final day, 1st Belgian to win a Pro Tour
2

Japan Tsuyoshi Fujita
$20,000
20
2nd Final day
3

Sweden Johan Sadeghpour
$15,000
16

4

Finland Antti Malin
$13,000
16

5

Japan Masashi Oiso
$9,000
12
5th Final day
6

Finland Tomi Walamies
$8,500
12
3rd Final day
7

Czech Republic Arnost Zidek
$8,000
12

8

Sweden David Larsson
$7,500
12


Pro Player of the year standings





















Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

France Olivier Ruel
59
2

United States Gadiel Szleifer
50
3

Japan Shu Komuro
49
4

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
47

Japan Masashi Oiso
47

Japan Kenji Tsumura
47


Grand Prixs – Minneapolis, Niigata, Taipei, Salt Lake City, Mexico City, Nottingham

















Pro Tour – Los Angeles (28–30 October 2005)


Antoine Ruel defeated Billy Moreno in the finals to become champion of Pro Tour Los Angeles. He played a blue-black control deck, built around Psychatog.[10]



Tournament data


Players: 340

Prize Pool: $200,130

Format: Extended

Head Judge: Gijsbert Hoogendijk[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1

Kenji Tsumura

3
8
Ryuichi Arita
1
Kenji Tsumura
0


Antoine Ruel

3
5

Antoine Ruel

3
4
Tsuyoshi Fujita
1

Antoine Ruel

3

Billy Moreno
0
2

Billy Moreno

3
7
Ervin Tormos
2

Billy Moreno

3

Chris McDaniel
2
3

Chris McDaniel

3
6
Chih-Hsian Chang
1


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

France Antoine Ruel
$30,000
25
3rd Final day
2

United States Billy Moreno
$20,000
20

3

Japan Kenji Tsumura
$15,000
16
3rd Final day
4

United States Chris McDaniel
$13,000
16

5

Japan Tsuyoshi Fujita
$9,000
12
3rd Final day
6

Taiwan Chih-Hsiang Chang
$8,500
12
1st Taiwanese Player in a Top 8
7

United States Ervin Tormos
$8,000
12
Pro Tour debut
8

Japan Ryuichi Arita
$7,500
12
3rd Final day


Pro Player of the year standings




















Rank
Player
Pro Points
1

Japan Kenji Tsumura
72
2

France Olivier Ruel
67
3

Japan Masashi Oiso
62
4

United States Gadiel Szleifer
58
5

Japan Shu Komuro
55


Grand Prixs – Melbourne, Copenhagen, Kitakyuushuu, Philadelphia, Bilbao, Beijing

















2005 World Championships – Yokohama (30 November – 4 December 2005)



The tournament began with the first Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Jon Finkel, Darwin Kastle, Tommi Hovi, Alan Comer and Olle Råde were honored for their accomplishments and their determination to the game. In the final of the 2005 World Championship Katsuhiro Mori defeated Frank Karsten, thus completing an all-Japanese Worlds in Yokohama. The Top 4 also included Japanese players Akira Asahara and Tomohiro Kaji, shortly before Japan had won the team competition, and even the Pro Player of the year went to Japanese Kenji Tsumura.[11]



Tournament data


Prize pool: $208,130 (individual) + $195,000 (national teams)

Players: 287

Formats: Standard, Booster Draft (Ravnica), Extended

Head Judge: Collin Jackson, Sheldon Menery[2]



Top 8
















































































































Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Finals
         
1
Marcio Carvalho
1
8

Akira Asahara

3
Akira Asahara
2


Frank Karsten

3
5
Ding Leong
2
4

Frank Karsten

3
Frank Karsten
1


Katsuhiro Mori

3
2

Tomohiro Kaji

3
7
André Coimbra
1
Tomohiro Kaji
1


Katsuhiro Mori

3
3

Katsuhiro Mori

3
6
Shuhei Nakamura
0


Final standings















































Place
Player
Prize
Pro Points
Comment
1

Japan Katsuhiro Mori
$35,000
32

2

Netherlands Frank Karsten
$23,000
24
2nd Final day
3

Japan Tomohiro Kaji
$15,000
16
2nd Final day
4

Japan Akira Asahara
$13,000
16

5

Portugal Marcio Carvalho
$9,500
12

6

Singapore Ding Leong
$8,500
12

7

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
$7,500
12
2nd Final day
8

Portugal André Coimbra
$6,500
12


National team competition



  1. Japan Japan (Ichiro Shimura, Takuma Morifuji, Masashi Oiso)


  2. United States United States (Jonathan Sonne, Antonino De Rosa, Neil Reeves)


Pro Player of the year final standings


After the World Championship Kenji Tsumura was awarded the Pro Player of the year title as the first Japanese player.


























Rank
Player
Pro Points
Prize
1

Japan Kenji Tsumura
84
$12,000
2

France Olivier Ruel
83
$11,800
3

Japan Masashi Oiso
80
$11,600
4

Japan Shuhei Nakamura
66
$11,400
5

United States Gadiel Szleifer
62
$11,200


References




  1. ^ "Canali Crushes Columbus". Wizards of the Coast. 31 October 2004. Retrieved 24 March 2009..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ abcdefg "Head Judges of Pro Tours and World Championships". XS4ALL. 30 October 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2009.


  3. ^ "Komuro Finishes the Rochester". Wizards of the Coast. 30 January 2005. Retrieved 24 March 2009.


  4. ^ "Nova Burns Brightest in Atlanta". Wizards of the Coast. 13 March 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  5. ^ "2005 Pro Tour-Philadelphia". Wizards of the Coast. 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  6. ^ Buehler, Randy (2 May 2005). "Welcome to the Pro Players Club". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  7. ^ "Szleifer Seizes Sunday". Wizards of the Coast. 8 May 2004. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  8. ^ David-Marshall, Brian (7 May 2005). "Feature: Kai Budde in Black and White". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  9. ^ "Siron Sweeps to Victory". Wizards of the Coast. 10 July 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  10. ^ "A Starring Role for Antoine Ruel". Wizards of the Coast. 30 October 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.


  11. ^ "Worlds 2005: Japan's Crowning Achievement". Wizards of the Coast. 4 December 2005. Retrieved 25 March 2009.









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