Eugene Park, better known as Pobelter, is an American retired League of Legends player who was formerly the mid laner for Counter Logic Gaming.[2] He is a three-time champion of the LCS[3] and has made four major international appearances.

Pobelter
Park in 2016
Personal information
NameEugene Park
Nickname(s)The Notorious P.O.B.[1]
NationalityAmerican
Career information
GamesLeague of Legends
RoleMid Laner
Team history
2011–2012Team Curse
2013Curse Academy
2013Team Curse
2014Evil Geniuses
2015Winterfox
2015Counter Logic Gaming
20162017Immortals
2018Team Liquid
2019FlyQuest
20202021Counter Logic Gaming
Career highlights and awards
  • LCS champion

Early life edit

Pobelter has an older sister.[4] He attended Troy High School in Fullerton, California. He tested into the school as he was an out-of-district student, and studied computer science in the Troy Tech magnet program. Pobelter initially played League of Legends as a hobby during high school.[5]

Career edit

Pobelter played on Team Curse, and eventually moved to Winterfox, a team largely perceived as being built around him. After Winterfox's loss in the relegation tournament after the Spring 2015 season, Pobelter abandoned the team and moved to Counter Logic Gaming, which proceeded to win the Summer 2015 Split. CLG then elected to play Huhi as their mid laner, prompting Pobelter to move to Immortals, which had highly successful regular seasons in 2016 but strangely failed in playoffs, losing 0–3 to TSM in the semifinals of the NA LCS Spring Split playoffs in April, and losing 2–3 to Cloud9 in the summer seminals.[6] They finished third in the 2016 Spring NA LCS, beating Team Liquid 3–0 in the third-place decider match.[7] After Immortals were removed from the LCS in the 2018 season, Pobelter joined the successful Team Liquid. In 2019, Team Liquid replaced Pobelter with Jensen, and Pobelter went to Flyquest.[8] Flyquest was reasonably successful in 2019 Spring, finishing fourth, but placed ninth in the Summer split. Flyquest announced that they had hired Tristan "PowerOfEvil" Schrage as their midlaner for 2020; Pobelter wrote in November 2019 that he had not been picked up by any team for a starting position in 2020.[9] Unable to find a position, Pobelter coached for Team Liquid during the first half of the 2020 Spring Split, but eventually returned to Counter Logic Gaming's as their midlaner.[10][11] On August 5, 2020, he was optioned to CLG's academy team.[12]

Tournament results edit

Career Tournament Results
Date Event Placing Team Record Opponent
August 3–5, 2012 2012 MLG Summer Championship   3rd Team Curse 1-2 Azubu Blaze, Team SoloMid, and Team BLACK
March 15–17, 2013 2013 MLG Winter Championship 3rd-4th Curse Academy 0-2 Velocity eSports
June 29, 2013 2013 MLG Spring Championship 3rd-4th Curse Academy 1-2 FXOpen e-Sports
January 24–March 29, 2015 2015 NA LCS Spring Regular Season 8th Winterfox 7-11 N/A
May 30–July 26, 2015 2015 NA LCS Summer Regular Season   2nd Counter Logic Gaming 13-5 N/A
August 23, 2015 2015 NA LCS Summer Playoffs   1st Counter Logic Gaming 3-0 Team SoloMid
January 16–March 20, 2016 2016 NA LCS Spring Regular Season   1st Immortals 17-1 N/A
April 10, 2016 2016 NA LCS Spring Playoffs   3rd Immortals 3-0 Team Liquid
June 3–July 31, 2016 2016 NA LCS Summer Regular Season   2nd Immortals 16-2 N/A
August 27, 2016 2016 NA LCS Summer Playoffs   3rd Immortals 3-2 Counter Logic Gaming
January 20–March 26, 2017 2017 NA LCS Spring Regular Season 7th Immortals 8-10 N/A
June 2–August 6, 2017 2017 NA LCS Summer Regular Season   2nd Immortals 14-4 N/A
September 3, 2017 2017 NA LCS Summer Playoffs   2nd Immortals 1-3 Team SoloMid
October 5–15, 2017 2017 League of Legends World Championship Group Stage 9th-12th Immortals 2-5 Longzhu Gaming, Fnatic, and GIGABYTE Marines
January 20–March 18, 2018 2018 NA LCS Spring Regular Season 4th Team Liquid 12-8 N/A
April 8, 2018 2018 NA LCS Spring Playoffs  1st Team Liquid 3-0 100 Thieves

References edit

  1. ^ Esguerra, Tyler (March 7, 2020). "Pobelter pulls off the perfect teleport flank to carry CLG over Team Liquid in week seven of the 2020 Spring Split". Dot Esports. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  2. ^ Ousley, Parkes (February 19, 2020). "League of Legends: Pobelter to start mid for CLG, replacing Crown". Inven Global. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  3. ^ Byers, Preston (November 25, 2019). "Pobelter won't play in LCS Spring Split, but he won't retire either". Dotesports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  4. ^ Eugene "Pobelter" Park (subject) (August 11, 2015). DRIVE: The Pobelter Story #LCSDRIVE. LoL Esports. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  5. ^ "Behind the ID: Eugene 'Pobelter' Park". ESPN.com. July 6, 2016. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  6. ^ Erzberger, Tyler (April 11, 2016). "Bjergsen: TSM trusted each other and took down Immortals". ESPN. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
  7. ^ Rosen, Daniel (April 16, 2016). "Immortals sweep Team Liquid 3-0, secure third place in 2016 NA LCS Spring Playoffs". theScore esports. theScore Inc. Archived from the original on April 26, 2016. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  8. ^ Goslin, Austen (December 4, 2018). "Pobelter moves to FlyQuest after one season with Team Liquid". Riftherald.com. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  9. ^ Esguerra, Tyler (November 26, 2019). "Doublelift: "I think [Pobelter] is easily a top 3, top 4 mid laner in LCS"". Dot Esports. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  10. ^ Esguerra, Tyler (December 12, 2019). "Pobelter joins Team Liquid as new positional coach". Dot Esports. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  11. ^ "Pobelter joins Team Liquid as positional coach". ESPN. December 12, 2019. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  12. ^ Heath, Jerome (August 5, 2020). "Pobelter benched for week 9 of 2020 LCS Summer Split, IWD says". DOT Esports. Retrieved August 6, 2020.