Photo via ESL

100 Thieves eliminate FaZe from ESL Pro League season 10 finals

100 Thieves have to win one more match to make it into the playoffs.

FaZe Clan’s CS:GO team has been sent home early from the ESL Pro League season 10 finals. They were defeated by 100 Thieves 2-1 today in the Group A lower bracket semifinal match.

Recommended Videos

Fans and analysts were expecting great things from FaZe. This was their first tournament since they won BLAST Pro Series Copenhagen in November.

100 Thieves started the series with a 16-11 win on Inferno. Their in-game leader, Aaron “AZR” Ward, topped the scoreboard with 24 frags. Marcelo “coldzera” David only had 15 kills, but he made one of the best plays of the tournament so far by picking up an ace while mainly using the UMP-45.

FaZe played better on their map pick and won Dust II 16-12. Håvard “rain” Nygaard led the international squad with 22 kills, but Sean “Gratisfaction” Kawai from 100 Thieves fragged the most with 28 eliminations.

Gratisfaction carried that form into the last map, Mirage. He got three kills in the pistol round again and top-fragged once more, this time with 22 kills. 100 Thieves easily won Mirage 16-7.

Losing to 100 Thieves is a normal result nowadays, but the loss that really cost FaZe was against MIBR in the opening round. Nikola “NiKo” Kovač and crew are now eliminated from the EPL season 10 finals along with some weaker teams, such as North, TYLOO, and Sharks. FaZe have one more event remaining for 2019, the BLAST Pro Series Global Final, which will start on Dec. 12.

100 Thieves, on the other hand, will have to win one more elimination game to advance to the quarterfinals. The Australians will face either MIBR or Fnatic tomorrow at 8:35am CT.


Dot Esports is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Related Content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Author
Leonardo Biazzi
Staff writer and CS:GO lead. Leonardo has been passionate about games since he was a kid and graduated in Journalism in 2018. Before Leonardo joined Dot Esports in 2019, he worked for Brazilian outlet Globo Esporte. Leonardo also worked for HLTV.org between 2020 and 2021 as a senior writer, until he returned to Dot Esports and became part of the staff team.