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North American CWL pro point standings for Call of Duty: WWII as of Nov. 21

Several notable teams are below the cutoff for pool play at CWL Dallas.
This article is over 7 years old and may contain outdated information

Following the conclusion of this week’s North American Call of Duty World League 2,000 series tournament, the pro point landscape for WWII is starting to become more clear. CWL pro points are used to determine a team’s seed for LAN events, such as the CWL Dallas Open in December. At CWL Dallas, only the top 10 NA teams in terms of pro points will earn a spot in pool play, while everyone else will have to fight through one of the toughest open brackets in Call of Duty history. Related: OpTic Gaming win consecutive NA CWL 2K tournaments to start the Call of Duty: WWII season This list of CWL pro points was calculated based on the GameBattles pro points leaderboard as of 12pm ET on Tuesday, Nov. 21. The top 10 NA teams are listed in order, and then various notable teams outside of the top 10 are provided below. Here are the CWL pro point standings for WWII following the second NA 2K tournament.

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Top 10 NA teams

1) OpTic Gaming: Seth “Scump” Abner, Matthew “FormaL” Piper, Damon “Karma” Barlow, and Ian “Crimsix” Porter — 17,560 2) Luminosity: Josiah “Slacked” Berry, Sam “Octane” Larew, Jordan “JKap” Kaplan, and Johnathan “John” Perez — 11,905 3) Team Kaliber: Dylan “Theory” McGee, Lamar “Accuracy” Abedi, Martin Chino, and Kenny Williams — 8,825 4) Enigma6: Jordon General, Brandon “Dashy” Otell, Jacob “Decemate” Cato, and Embry “Bevils” Bevil — 7,180 5) Team Envy: Austin “SlasheR” Liddicoat, Nicholas “Classic” DiCostanzo, Donovan “Temp” Laroda, and Cuyler “Huke” Garland — 7,160 6) Team Parasite: Christopher “Parasite” Duarte, “Blazt,” “Fero,” and Jeremy “StuDyy” Astacio— 6,895 7) Ghost Gaming: Michael “SpaceLy” Schmale, Andres Lacefield, Chance “Maux” Moncivaez, and Devin “LlamaGod” Tran — 6,865 8) Rise Nation: Daniel “Loony” Loza, Ulysses “Aqua” Silva, Tyler “FeLo” Johnson, and Tommy “TJHaLY” Haly — 6,740 9) Rockets Esports: Brandon “Nelson” McKinney, Eric “Twizz” Servello, Teegan “TcM” McCarthy, and Robert “Dimi” Redford — 5,720 10) Team Methodz: Anthony “Methodz” Zinni, Jared “Nagafen” Harrell, Mike “Blfire” Glushenok, Jonathan “SinfuL” Baez — 5,610


Other notable teams

Evil Geniuses: Patrick “ACHES” Price, Bryan “Apathy” Zhelyazkov, Ian “Enable” Wyatt, and Anthony “NAMELESS” Wheeler — 5,570 Team Goonjar: Jevon “Goonjar” Gooljar-Lim, Matthew “Royalty” Faithfull, John “Xotic” Bruno, and Nicholas “Proto” Maldonado — 5,410 eUnited: James “Clayster” Eubanks, Alec “Arcitys” Sanderson, Preston “Prestinni” Sanderson, and Justin “SiLLY” Fargo-Palmer — 5,340 Allegiance: Mehran “Mayhem” Anjomshoa, Tristan “Spoof” Green, Dakota “Nova” Williams, and Austin “Believe” Smith — 4,110 Pure Gaming: Brandon “Sharp” Rodgers, Jeremy “Neslo” Olsen, Tosh “Stainville” McGruder, and Jamal “Whea7s” Lee — 4,100 FaZe Clan: Dillon “Attach” Price, Tommy “ZooMaa” Paparratto, Preston “Priest” Greiner, and James “Replays” Crowder — 3,840 eRa Eternity: Kenneth Dedo, Jordan “ProoFy” Cannon, Colt “Havok” McLendon, and Patryk “Rallied” Salata — 3,770 Echo Fox: Brice Faccento, Renato “Saints” Forza, Adam “Assault” Garcia, and Peirce “Gunless” Hillman — 3,380


All of these teams will have another opportunity to gain more crucial pro points in the next NA CWL 2K on Sunday, Nov. 26.


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Author
Image of Justin Binkowski
Justin Binkowski
Dot Esports Editor. I primarily play, watch, and write about Call of Duty but can also occasionally be found feeding the enemy ADC in League of Legends. I have been following competitive Call of Duty since 2011 and writing about it since 2015.