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Monday Morning Marth: Nov. 12

This series is a tribute to standard “Monday Morning Quarterback” columns in traditional sports. In it, I discuss my quick takeaways from the last week of the Smash community. Consider this a mix of news and mild takes. Featured image from 2GG. Will take down if requested.

On Sunday, Leffen won The Mango: Homecoming. SFAT finished in second place, which awarded the NorCal Fox the final spot for the upcoming Smash Summit 7.

For other tournaments during the weekend, Ohio Ice Climbers Boyd won the Champaign regional House of Paign 19. This was notable because it also featured the likes of runnerup KJH, lloD, Rishi, many of the Midwest’s best and Mew2King, who played Pichu for most of the event.

Over in central New York, DJ Nintendo won See Me On LAN 2, defeating 2Saint. The tournament also featured a surprise performance from Sheik main Jmook, Central New York’s best player, who finished in third place and dominantly swept La Luna in winner’s bracket.

1. Top 8 Thoughts from The Mango: Homecoming

2. House of Paign 19

Going into this event, I joked with many of my friends about how Boyd would win the tournament because of his predicted matchup with Mew2King. But with the god playing Pichu and entering loser’s bracket early, Boyd had nothing to worry about.

Through his underdog run at the Midwest tournament, Boyd beat Kels, ORLY, Rik and KJH twice to finish first. Off the top of my head, it strikes me as more out-of-nowhere than Captain Smuckers’ victory at The Gang Hosts A Melee Tournament. Given Boyd’s impressive resume and consistent attendance at larger events throughout 2018, his House of Paign 19 victory will likely cement him for a spot in SSBMRank for the year.

In hindsight, Mew2King playing Pichu was a sign for most of the chaos to come. Sheik main Pleeba, Iowa’s current No. 1 and former ranked player in Illinois, sent Rishi to loser’s bracket in round one of top 64. Similarly, Midwest Fox main Russell defeated Zamu in the same round, but that was only the beginning.

Rik swept Michael, who then destroyed Zamu in loser’s bracket. Cob sent Kels out of the tournament at ninth place. Mew2King randomly picked Marth against Esquire, apparently being okay with playing full Pichu against PRZ, but not wanting to lose before.

Years from now, we’re going to look at this event and wonder what the hell happened. Or at least forget it existed.

3. Quick Thoughts on Smash Summit 7

4. Monday Morning Mailbag

Hungrybox or the field for Summit? – sportsboy85

I’m going with the field, no question. Hungrybox just lost 3-0 to Duck at a smaller event, won The Big House 8 only after being handed a relatively easy bracket, and lost to Zain at Shine. Hungrybox might be the favorite, but he’s also not the same indestructible, late 2017 Hungrybox. If he had been tossing gods left and right, this would be another story.

Hypothetical: Let’s say a random smasher were to enter Genesis and proceed to 4 stock their opponent every single game, but they never enter another tournament. Assuming this person takes out several of the best current smashers, would this person make the year end top 100? How high would they be ranked? – andresalejandro1120

Four stocking everyone? Are you kidding me? This would be such an extraordinary feat that the regular rules of ranking players wouldn’t apply. The Melee scene would either indefinitely halt its activity until its community leaders got this person to compete or ban whatever game-breaking and new glitch person would had to have figured out to instantly win every  game by four stocks.

If it’s the former, the competitive legitimacy of the Melee scene would be at stake if it couldn’t entice the most dominant single-tournament smasher to ever live. If it’s the latter, whatever technique they use is banned and they likely remain a dark spot in the annals of Melee history. So, no rank.

How high would Zain need to place at Summit for him to break into the Top 6? Or is there no chance, even if he wins Summit? – JoseElEntrenador

Barring an ungodly stinker from Mew2King and Zain finish in first place, it’s probably a little late for Zain to finish fifth, but it’s doable. I think it’s pretty unlikely though.

Zain’s issues with Captain Falcon throughout the year and his somewhat up-and-down record against every non-SFAT player within the tier below the top six makes me a little hesitant to put him above even Mango right now. Another tournament like Shine, however, would be huge for how he’s perceived moving forward.

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