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ESL Pro League

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Professional Counter-Strike 2 league
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(December 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
ESL Pro League
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports eventESL Pro League Season 22
FormerlyESL ESEA Pro League
GameCounter-Strike 2
Founded2015
First seasonMay 4, 2015
OwnerESL
No. of teams24
RegionInternational
Most recent
champion
Team Vitality (Season 22)
Most titlesFnatic,MOUZ,Astralis andTeam Vitality (3 titles each)
BroadcasterTwitch
SponsorIntel
Official websitepro.eslgaming.com/csgo/proleague/

TheESL Pro League (formerlyESL ESEA Pro League; shortened asEPL) is aCounter-Strike 2 (CS2) professionalesports league, produced byESL. It was previously based on four regions: Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Oceania but following a format revamp in season 13, regional leagues were discontinued and unified into one league. ESL Pro League currently comprises 24 teams each season. The ESL Pro League is considered to be the premier professional CS2 league in the world and is one of the major professional leagues in esports. The ESL Pro League began as a venture between theElectronic Sports League (ESL) andE-Sports Entertainment Association League (ESEA). Its inaugural season started on May 4, 2015.[1]

History

[edit]

In early November 2014, the German-based Electronic Sports League announced the creation of the ESL Pro League as the European ESL league. On April 28, 2015,ESL announced a joint venture with the North American-basedE-Sports Entertainment Association League to provide a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive league with US$500,000 in total prize money in the first season between two continents. It later expanded to fourteen teams per region and raised its prize pool to US$1,000,000, with two seasons running each year.[2] The prize pool increased once more in 2018, with ESL making the teams fight for $1,000,000 in the Finals, raising the season prize pool by $250,000. In addition, the number of teams in the finals rose to sixteen, with more teams from regions other than North American and Europe participating in the Finals.[3][4][5]

On February 18, 2020, ESL would announce the Louvre Agreement, a revenue sharing partnership between ESL and the teams. Teams that signed on also qualified automatically for ESL Pro League as Permanent Partner Teams.[6] The Louvre Agreement would expire at the end of 2024, asValve, the game's developer, ended any form of partnership agreements within professionalCounter-Strike in 2025.[7]

In 2020, due to the onset of theCOVID-19 pandemic, seasons 11 and 12 did not have a global final, instead regional finals were held in Europe and North America. In 2021, starting from ESL Pro League Season 13, the organization announced a changed format, with one league replacing the four regional leagues that existed prior to the pandemic. All 24 teams would travel to Europe to participate in the league, with the top 12 teams of the 24-team regular season proceeding to the playoffs. With the consolidation of the tournament into one event, the prize pool was reduced to $750,000.[8] During ESL Pro League seasons 17 and 18, the prize pool was increased to $850,000 as a result of increasing the number of teams from 24 to 32.[9] This was reduced back to $750,000 for seasons 19 and 20, before increasing to $1,000,000 for Seasons 21 and 22, which contracted the league back to 24 teams.[10]


Format

[edit]

Prior to ESL Pro League Season 11, the league was split into 3 different regional leagues, Europe, Americas, and Asia-Pacific, with the top teams in each league qualifying for the season finals. However, due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, season 11 only included two leagues: Europe and North America[11] whereas season 12 was changed to have 5 regional leagues(Europe, North America, South America, Oceania, and Asia). Starting from ESL Pro League season 13, regional leagues were discontinued with teams from each region playing together in a unified league. Teams qualified to ESL Pro League based on their permanent partner team status,[12] ESL World Ranking, or through qualifying from regional Pro League Conference tournaments, ESL Challenger League tournaments, and ESL Challenger Tournaments.[13]

Starting from ESL Pro League Season 14, ESL announced a change to the playoffs format, removing the play-ins stage of the playoffs.[14]

Before ESL Pro League season 17, the format was as follows:

Following a format revamp by ESL,[15] which saw the removal of the round-robin format and an increase to 32 teams rather than 24 teams of the previous iterations. This ESL Pro League format, used up until 2024, was as follows:

Following Valve's decision to permanently remove partnerships from theCounter-Strike esports ecosystem in 2025, the format changed once more, with the number of teams reduced back to 24 teams. The current format follows the same one used at theMajors since 2018, with two Swiss stages of 16 teams followed by an 8 team knockout stage, albeit with all Swiss matches at Pro League being best of 3s and the final being a best of 5. Teams qualify via their ranking in the global Valve Regional Standings, the ESL Challenger League or via auxiliary competitions.

Seasons

[edit]

The list of seasons and the top two teams in each season are in shown below. The number next to the teams showed what positions they placed during the regular season in their respective leagues. Regional leagues were discontinued in Season 13. Starting from Season 23, only the playoffs would occur in person, with the first two stages held online.

No.LocationWinnerScoreRunner-upPrize moneyRef
1CologneFnatic(EU 1)3–1Cloud9(NA 1)US$250,000[16]
2BurbankFnatic(EU 2)3–2Natus Vincere(EU 3)US$250,000[17]
3LondonLuminosity Gaming(NA 1)3–2G2 Esports(EU 4)US$512,000[18]
4São PauloCloud9(NA 1)2–1SK Gaming(NA 3)US$600,000[19]
5DallasG2 Esports(EU 2)3–1North(EU 1)US$750,000[20]
6OdenseSK Gaming(NA 2)3–1FaZe Clan(EU 3)US$750,000[21]
7DallasAstralis(EU 6)3–1Team Liquid(NA 1)US$750,000[22]
8OdenseAstralis(EU 1)3–1Team Liquid(NA 3)US$750,000[23]
9MontpellierTeam Liquid(NA 2)3–1G2 Esports(EU 3)US$600,000[24]
10Odensemousesports(EU 1)3–0Fnatic(EU 8)US$600,000[25]
11 EUOnlineFnatic(EU 1)3–2mousesports(EU 3)US$531,000[Note 1][26][27]
11 NAOnlineTeam Liquid(NA 1)3–0Evil Geniuses(NA 2)US$219,000[Note 1][28][27]
12 EUOnlineAstralis(EU 1)3–2Natus Vincere(EU 2)US$450,000[Note 1][29]
12 NAOnlineFuria Esports(NA 1)3–0100 Thieves(NA 2)US$225,000[Note 1][30]
13OnlineHeroic3–2Gambit EsportsUS$750,000[31]
14OnlineNatus Vincere3–2Team VitalityUS$750,000[32]
15DüsseldorfFaZe Clan3–1ENCEUS$850,000[33]
16NaxxarTeam Vitality3–2Team LiquidUS$835,000[34]
17Saint Julian'sFaZe Clan3–1Cloud9US$850,000[35]
18Saint Julian'sMOUZ3–0Natus VincereUS$850,000[36]
19Saint Julian'sMOUZ3–0Team VitalityUS$750,000[37]
20Saint Julian'sNatus Vincere3–2Eternal FireUS$750,000[38]
21StockholmTeam Vitality3–0MOUZUS$1,000,000[39]
22StockholmTeam Vitality3–0Team FalconsUS$1,000,000[40]
23TBD,EuropeUS$1,000,000
24KatowiceUS$1,000,000[41]

Notes

  1. ^abcdSeasons 11 and 12 were originally intended to be an offline event, with the finals taking place atDenver,Colorado,United States. However, due to the globalCOVID-19 pandemic, ESL announced that both the regular season and the finals will be split into regions: Europe and North America for Season 11 and Europe, North America, South America, Oceania, and Asia for Season 12, and that the regular season and the finals will be played entirely online. This was decided based on health and safety reasons and to minimize movement across regions.

Other leagues

[edit]

ESL also operated other leagues outside of Counter-Strike. TheRainbow Six Pro League ran for 10 seasons (with an 11th being cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic), beforeFACEIT and later BLAST operated the game's pro circuit. The PENTA Sports/G2 Esports core won the most titles with four, those being the Year 1 Season 1, Year 2 Season 1, Year 2 Season 2, and Season 8 titles. ESL also ran theHalo Championship Series in its inception and, via ESL's acquisition of Esports Engine in 2023,[42] currently operate the league withHalo Studios the game's developer. However, the two leagues are much less prominent than the Counter-Strike league, as Rainbow Six only had a $248,000 prize pool in 2019 compared to CS:GO's $600,000 prize pool.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"ESL ESEA Pro League Season 1".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  2. ^"World's largest Counter-Strike league to be hosted by ESL and ESEA".ESL Gaming. April 2, 2015. Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2015. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2015.
  3. ^Mira, Luis (February 20, 2018)."ESL Pro League Season 7 Finals expanded to 16 teams".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2018.
  4. ^Steiner, Dustin (February 20, 2018)."ESL Pro League Returns to Dallas for $1 Million Finals".Unikrn. Archived fromthe original on April 6, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2018.
  5. ^Schulze, Ulrich (February 20, 2018)."Ulrich Schulze on Twitter: The expansion to 16 teams for #ESLProLeague finals comes with geographical expansion. More details on that soon".Twitter. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2018.
  6. ^Wu, Stephen (18 February 2020)."ESL reaches agreement with top Counter-Strike teams".Gaming Street. Retrieved18 October 2024.
  7. ^Nordland, Jake (3 August 2023)."Valve set to overhaul Counter-Strike esports ecosystem with major tournament rule changes".Esports Insider. Retrieved18 October 2024.
  8. ^"ESL Pro League – Season 14".pro.eslgaming.com. Retrieved2021-05-29.
  9. ^"ESL Pro League - Season 17".pro.eslgaming.com. Retrieved2023-08-27.
  10. ^Mira, Luis (16 December 2024)."Club financial incentives introduced as ESL reveals more EPT details".HLTV.org. Retrieved16 December 2024.
  11. ^"Season 11 Online Format Update - ESL Pro League CS:GO".pro.eslgaming.com. 2020-03-13. Retrieved2023-08-27.
  12. ^"Leading CS:GO teams and ESL sign historic agreement - ESL Pro League CS:GO".pro.eslgaming.com. 2020-02-18. Retrieved2023-08-27.
  13. ^Teams could begin qualifying for ESL Pro League from Challenger tournaments starting from season 17, whereas Conference tournaments began from season 15. ESL Challenger tournaments are not the same as ESL Challenge League tournaments.
  14. ^"Format Change to ESL Pro League Season 14 Playoffs - ESL Pro League CS:GO".pro.eslgaming.com. 2021-07-27. Retrieved2023-08-27.
  15. ^"ESL Pro League: 2023 Update - ESL Pro League CS:GO".pro.eslgaming.com. 2022-12-21. Retrieved2023-08-27.
  16. ^"ESL ESEA Pro League Season 1 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  17. ^"ESL ESEA Pro League Season 2 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  18. ^"ESL Pro League Season 3 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  19. ^"ESL Pro League Season 4 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  20. ^"ESL Pro League Season 5 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  21. ^"ESL Pro League Season 6 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  22. ^"ESL Pro League Season 7 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  23. ^"ESL Pro League Season 8 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2018.
  24. ^"ESL Pro League Season 9 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedJune 23, 2019.
  25. ^"ESL Pro League Season 10 Finals overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2020.
  26. ^"ESL Pro League Season 11 Europe overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedMarch 11, 2020.
  27. ^ab"Season 11 to be played online, finals moved from Denver to studio location". ESL Pro League. 2020-03-11. Retrieved2020-03-28.
  28. ^"ESL Pro League Season 11 North America overview".HLTV.org. RetrievedMarch 11, 2020.
  29. ^"ESL Pro League Season 12 Europe".HLTV.org. Retrieved2021-03-08.
  30. ^"ESL Pro League Season 12 North America".HLTV.org. Retrieved2021-03-08.
  31. ^"ESL Pro League Season 13".HLTV.org. Retrieved2021-05-29.
  32. ^"ESL Pro League Season 14".HLTV.org. Retrieved2021-09-12.
  33. ^"ESL Pro League Season 15".HLTV.org. RetrievedMarch 13, 2022.
  34. ^"ESL Pro League Season 16".
  35. ^"ESL Pro League Season 17".
  36. ^"ESL Pro League Season 18".
  37. ^"ESL Pro League Season 19".
  38. ^"ESL Pro League Season 20".HLTV. September 3–22, 2024. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2024.
  39. ^"ESL Pro League Season 21 overview".HLTV. 16 March 2025. Retrieved16 March 2025.
  40. ^"ESL Pro League Season 22 overview".HLTV.org. Retrieved2025-10-12.
  41. ^Županič, Žan (12 August 2025)."Katowice's Spodek Arena to host EPL S24 Finals".HLTV. Retrieved12 August 2025.
  42. ^Fragen, Jordan (1 March 2023)."ESL FACEIT Group acquires Vindex to support esports event ops".VentureBeat. Retrieved18 October 2024.
Esports competition hosted byESL
ESL Pro League
Intel Extreme Masters
ESL One
Counter-Strike:
Global Offensive
Games
Tournaments
Majors
Defunct
Notable teams
Europe
Americas
Asia/Oceania
Defunct
Notable commentators
Esports and competitive video gaming
Fighting
MOBA
Real-time strategy
Shooter
Sports
Other genres
Multi-genre
Governing bodies
Defunct organizations
By country
Years
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