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Sport | EA Sports FCesports |
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Founded | February 21, 2018; 7 years ago (2018-02-21) New York City,New York, U.S. |
First season | 2018 |
No. of teams | 28 |
Country | United States (25 teams) Canada (3 teams) |
Continent | North America |
Most recent champion(s) | New England Revolution (1st title) |
Most titles | 7 teams (1 title) |
TV partner(s) | Twitch |
Sponsor(s) | Alienware Electronic Arts Major League Soccer PlayStation 4 |
Related competitions | FC Pro World Championship formerlyFIFA eWorld Cup |
Official website | eMLS |
TheeMLS Cup is anesports tournament held byMajor League Soccer in conjunction with theEA Sports onEA Sports FC (formerlyFIFA franchise). The tournament serves as an official league qualifier for theFC Pro World Championship (formerlyFIFA eWorld Cup).
The 2018 eMLS Cup ran from April 5–8 at thePAX East gaming festival at theBoston Convention and Exhibition Center inBoston, Massachusetts. The tournament was contested by representatives of 19MLS clubs divided into their respective Eastern and Western Conferences. Competitors were required to have three MLS players on the field at all times, including two players from the club that they represented. An initial preliminary regular season saw players play each other twice in a round robin format before the top eight teams from each conference progressed to a knockout phase. Both eMLS Cup finalists won berths in the Global Series Playoffs, the qualifying tournament for the 2018FIFA eWorld Cup, with the winner also receiving $10,000 prize money.[1][2]
The 2019 eMLS Cup Finals were held on March 30 at thePAX East gaming festival atThe Castle at Park Plaza inBoston, Massachusetts. The tournament was contested by representatives of 22MLS clubs divided into their respective Eastern and Western Conferences. Competitors were required to have three MLS players on the field at all times. The format consisted of two prior series earlier in the year with the final standings combining the regular season conference records from Series 1 and 2 with one final regular season played at the 2019 eMLS Cup finals itself against players from the opposite conference. The top five players in each conference based on their aggregated record from Series 1 and Series 2, the resultant bonus points, and the eMLS Cup regular season, qualified for the knockout phase of the tournament with the top two gaining first-round byes. The remaining players competed in a last chance qualifying bracket for the final place in each conference's knockout phase. The overall winner received $15,000 prize money.[3][4]
Year | 1st place | 2nd place | 3rd place | 4th place |
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2018 | Kid M3Mito (Houston Dynamo) | LyesMTL (Montreal Impact) | Didychrislito (New York City FC) | AlanAvi (FC Dallas) |
2019 | Doolsta (Philadelphia Union) | GGGodfather (LA Galaxy) | Didychrislito (New York City FC) / AlanAvi (FC Dallas) | |
2020 | G_Adamou (New York Red Bulls) | Didychrislito (New York City FC) | RemiMartinn (Los Angeles FC) / Paulo Neto (Atlanta United FC) | |
2021 | Didychrislito (New York City FC) | G_Adamou (New York Red Bulls) | xbLeU (Austin FC) / GGGodfather (LA Galaxy) | |
2022 | Paulo Neto (Atlanta United FC) | KingCJ0 (D.C. United) | GoalMachine (Toronto FC) | Lamps (Minnesota United FC) |
2023 | NR7 (St. Louis City SC) | Paulo Neto (Atlanta United FC) | Lamps (Minnesota United FC) | Loux11 (CF Montreal) |
2024 | Jafonso (New England Revolution) | K1John (Inter Miami CF) | Ollelito (New York City FC) | NR7 (St. Louis City SC) |