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Image via Capcom

Snake Eyez flexes his way to CEO title

Snake Eyez leads another American top-four sweep in the final major tune-up before Evo.
This article is over 7 years old and may contain outdated information

After a two-plus-year drought of Capcom Pro Tour Premier event victories, American players are making up for lost time.

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Darryl “Snake Eyez” Lewis took top honors at the Street Fighter V tournament at CEO on Sunday, his first Premier event win since 2014 and his first at a Pro Tour event since the release of Street Fighter V.

Issues with the tournament venue’s internet connection led to multiple stream outages during Sunday’s finals. When fans were able to watch the event, they saw Snake Eyez flex his arms as he walked to the ring in homage to his character of choice, Zangief.

Snake Eyez imitates his character as he walks to the ring at CEO 2017

Then they saw Snake Eyez flex on his opponents in-game.

He scored a hard-fought 3-2 win over Zeng “XiaoHai” Zhuojun, then swept aside Miky “Samurai” Chea 3-0 in the winners’ final. He then secured the title by holding off ELEAGUE champion Victor “Punk” Woodley by a 3-2 margin in the grand final.

The win was his first Premier event triumph since his victory at The Fall Classic 2014. That event was the last Premier tournament won by an American player for over two years until Du “NuckleDu” Dang’s Canada Cup victory last October. Since then, American players have combined to win seven of the past 13 Premier events.

Snake Eyez led an American sweep of the top four positions at the event, the second such sweep at a Premier event in less than a month. Punk finished the weekend in second place, while Samurai and Bryant “Smug” Huggins took third- and fourth-place respectively.

Street Fighter V grand finals at CEO 2017: Punk (Karin/Nash) vs Snake Eyez (Zangief)

Egami “MOV” Joe of Japan and XiaoHai of China tied for fifth place, ending the weekend as the highest-placing foreign players at the event. Both men began Sunday’s finals in the winners’ side of the bracket but neither one was able to muster a victory on Sunday.

Reigning Capcom Cup champion NuckleDu tied for seventh place alongside Tsunehori “Gachikun” Kanamori. 

The recent run of American success gives American fans hope of seeing one of their own win an elusive Evo title. Americans have famously gone 0-for-ever in the two most recent main series Street Fighter games, IV and V. In fact, no American player has won any Street Fighter title at Evo since Snake Eyez’s win in the Super Street Fighter II Turbo: HD Remix tournament at the 2010 event.


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