Toronto Defiant esports team looks to surprise in debut Overwatch League season

Feb 14, 2019 | 8:15 AM

Underestimate the Toronto Defiant at your peril, says head coach Beoumjun (Bishop) Lee, whose esports team kicks off its inaugural season Friday in the Overwatch League.

“We’re very excited for the match to finally be here,” he said from Los Angeles, where most games are played. “It’s a moment to show the world what the underdogs are capable of.

“Everyone has thankfully ranked us really low. So we’re happy to prove everyone wrong … There’s no better story than the underdog story.”

“Overwatch” is a team-based, first-person shooter video game (a genre centred around weapon-based combat) from Blizzard Entertainment that has spawned a worldwide esports league. Toronto and the Vancouver Titans are two of eight new franchises chasing the US$5-million prize pool, up from $3.5 million last year.

Toronto opens play Friday against the Houston Outlaws while Vancouver begins Saturday against the Shanghai Dragons.

The inaugural 2018 season featured 12 teams: Boston Uprising, Florida Mayhem, Houston Outlaws, London Spitfire, New York Excelsior and Philadelphia Fusion in the Atlantic Division and Dallas Fuel, Los Angeles Gladiators, Los Angeles Valiant, San Francisco Shock, Seoul Dynasty and Shanghai Dragons in the Pacific Division.

Other expansion franchises for 2019 are Atlanta, Washington, D.C., Paris, and Chengdu, Guangzhou and Hangzhou, China.

London won the inaugural league championship — and $1 million — last July, defeating Philadelphia 3-0 at a soldout Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. Philadelphia collected $400,000 as runner-up.

This year, the champion will earn $1.1 million with the runner-up getting $600,000.

All players and coaches are referred to by their nicknames in the sport.

Bishop, 29, helped put the London team together and served as coach before parting ways with the squad in March. He is known for his ability to find talent.

“I won’t disagree with that,” he said.

The Defiant’s all-Korean roster features Yakpung (Kyeongmu Cho), Envy (Kangjae Lee), Stellar (Dohyung Lee), Ivy (Seunghyeon Lee), Neko (Se Hyun Park), Aid (Jae Yoon Ko), Asher (Junsung Choi) and Roky (JooSung Park). They range in age from 18 to 24.

Six play in a match.

Asher (Los Angeles Gladiators), Neko (Boston Uprising) and Envy (Los Angeles Valiant) have Overwatch League experience. Most of the rest came from the 02 Ardeont squad from the Korean Contenders circuit.

The team, which lives together in a well-appointed Los Angeles home, will be hard to miss.

“You can spot us from anywhere,” said Bishop, who lives 20 minutes away but spends the days with his team. “We’re always going to be the loudest group among all the Overwatch League players. We’re always going to be having the best time.

“But I always tell the players if you’re going to play hard, make sure you work hard as well.”

While Korean is their current preferred language to communicate, they are taking English lessons.

The majority of Overwatch League matches will be played at the Blizzard Arena in Los Angeles. The league plans to eventually stage games in franchise cities and is taking the first steps towards that with so-called Homestand Weekends this season. The Dallas Fuel (April 27-28), Atlanta Reign (July 6-7), and Los Angeles Valiant (Aug. 24) will each host a weekend round of games in their cities.

Born in South Korea, Bishop moved to the U.S. with his family when he was one. Raised in the Midwest, he studied psychology at the University of Minnesota before returning to South Korea to do his mandatory military service.

Bishop then decided to try his hand at being a professional gamer.

“I started gaming at the age of 26 and that is way past the prime for an Overwatch player,” he said. “It was many things. I think it was the most exciting part of my life, especially going on stage in APEX (a Korean Overwatch circuit).”

When Bishop learned of the formation of the Overwatch League, he said he knew he had a “bigger role to play” and moved into coaching. He was following the recommendation of Dennis (INTERNETHULK) Hawelka, a German player-turned-coach who passed away in November 2017 at the age of 30.

While South Korean players dominate Overwatch League rosters, the league also has players from Canada, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Israel, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, Thailand and the U.S.

The Canadians under contract this year are Ottawa’s Christopher (Bani) Benell (Houston Outlaws), Brady (Agilities) Gerardi of Blairemore, Alta., (Los Angeles Valiant), Calgary’s Lane (Surefour) Roberts (Los Angeles Gladiators) and Lucas (NotE) Meissner of Barrie, Ont., (Boston Uprising).

Seven Canadians competed in the 2018 inaugural season when players earned a minimum salary of $50,000, with health-care and housing provided plus a retirement plan. Expansion franchises reportedly cost at least $30 million.

The Defiant will be without Neko for its first three games. He’s serving a suspension for “selling an account and obstructing league office investigation.” The Overwatch League declined to detail the offence, referring questions to its five-page code of conduct.

The Toronto franchise noted the infringement occurred before he joined the team.

The league is the brainchild of Overwatch developer Blizzard Entertainment, whose gaming portfolio also includes “World of Warcraft” and “StarCraft.” Blizzard says Overwatch has more than 40 million players.

The 2019 season opened Thursday with four games.

Fans can watch games online via Twitch or, in some cases, overwatchleague.com.

 

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Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press