Liga Latinoamérica
Most recent season or competition: 2024 LLA season | |
Formerly | Liga Latinoamérica Norte Copa Latinoamérica Sur |
---|---|
Game | League of Legends |
Founded | October 2018 |
First season | 2019[1] |
Ceased | 2024 |
Replaced by | League of Legends Championship of The Americas |
Owner(s) | Riot Games |
No. of teams | 6 |
Last champion(s) | Movistar R7 (4th title) |
Most titles | Movistar R7 (4 titles) |
Qualification | Promotion tournament |
TV partner(s) | Twitch, YouTube |
Relegation to | Ligas Regionales
|
Related competitions | Campeonato Brasileiro de League of Legends |
Official website | la |
The Liga Latinoamérica (LLA; lit. 'Latin America League') was the top level of professional League of Legends in Latin America (refers to Hispanic America). The esports league was run by Riot Games Latin America.[2] Each annual competitive season was divided into opening and closing seasons, which concluded with a playoff tournament between the top four teams.
Plans for the league were first announced in May 2018 by Riot Games, which stated that it would merge Latin America's two regional leagues, the Liga Latinoamérica Norte (LLN, North Latin America League) and Copa Latinoamérica Sur (CLS, South Latin America Cup), into a single competition.[3][4]
The LLA ceased operations after the 2024 season, as three teams from the league will join a merged pan-American league known as the League of Legends Championship of The Americas, with a team from Northern Latin America joining the North Conference (made up of teams formerly from the LCS) and two teams from southern Latin America joining the South Conference (made up of teams formerly from CBLOL).[5][6]
Format
[edit]Each opening and closing season consisted of a group stage and a playoff stage. In the group stage, teams competed for points in a double round robin spread over two phases. The top four teams from the group stage would advance to the playoff stage, which used a "King of the Hill" single elimination bracket.[7] During the 2019 season, there were no phases in the group stage, and six teams participated in a standard single elimination bracket in the playoff stage.[8]
At the end of each split, the teams in the LLA were given performance points, with the bottom two teams in performance points after the Closing split playing in promotion and relegation series against the winners of the two regional leagues in Latin America, the Liga Regional Norte for teams in Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, Colombia and Ecuador, and the Liga Regional Sur for teams from Argentina, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay, for a chance to play in the next season's LLA. The 2023 and 2024 promotion tournaments were cancelled with no performance points awarded for the Closing split, following the expelling from one of the teams due to mismanagement and the league's merger respectively.
Group stage
[edit]- Six teams participated[9][10]
- Double round robin, matches were best-of-three
- Match victories awarded teams one point
- Top six teams advanced to Playoffs
Playoffs
[edit]Double elimination bracket
- Matches were best-of-five
- Top 4 teams play in the winners' bracket
- 5th plays against 6th in the losers' bracket
- The loser with the lower seed from winners' bracket plays in losers' bracket round 2
- The loser with the higher seed from winners' bracket plays in losers' bracket round 3
- For Closing 2024, there were only 4 teams in double elimination playoffs
Past seasons
[edit]Year | Season | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Opening | Isurus | Rainbow7 | All Knights |
Closing | Isurus | All Knights | Infinity Esports | |
2020 | Opening | All Knights | Isurus | Rainbow7 |
Closing | Rainbow7 | All Knights | Isurus | |
2021 | Opening | Infinity Esports | Furious Gaming | All Knights |
Closing | Infinity Esports | Estral Esports | Furious Gaming | |
2022 | Opening | Team Aze | Estral Esports | Rainbow7 |
Closing | Isurus | Estral Esports | Team Aze | |
2023 | Opening | Movistar R7 | Six Karma | Estral Esports |
Closing | Movistar R7 | Estral Esports | Six Karma | |
2024 | Opening | Estral Esports | Movistar R7 | Isurus |
Closing | Movistar R7 | INFINITY | Isurus |
References
[edit]- ^ Souto, Francisco (31 May 2018). "LoL: La CLS y LLN se fusionarán en una liga latinoamericana única a partir de 2019". Cultura Geek (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Vergara, Pedro (19 April 2019). "The final of the League of Legends of eSports will be in Bogotá". LatinAmerican Post. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Ashton, Graham (31 May 2018). "Riot Games to Unite Latin America League of Legends Competitions". The Esports Observer. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Fitch, Adam (1 June 2018). "Riot Games to consolidate competitions into singular Latin American league". Esports Insider. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Wilson, Jason (11 June 2024). "Riot Games rolls out consolidation plan, new spring event for League of Legends esports". Sports Business Journal. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
- ^ Taifalos, Nicholas; McIntyre, Isaac (11 June 2024). "LCS, CBLOL, LLA unified as Riot takes VALORANT-like approach to LoL esports". Dot Esports. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
- ^ "La LLA cambia de formato para el 2020". la.lolesports.com (in Spanish). LoL Esports Latinoamérica. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
- ^ "¡NO TE PIERDAS LA LIGA MOVISTAR LATINOAMÉRICA 2019!" (in Spanish). LoL Esports Latinoamérica. Archived from the original on 14 January 2019. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Moncav, Melany (11 October 2018). "Riot Games announces teams for new Latin American League (LLA)". Esports Insider. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Souto, Por Francisco (8 October 2018). "LoL: conocé a los 8 equipos que formarán parte de la liga Latinoamérica 2019". Cultura Geek (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 January 2020.