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Vitaliia Yurchenia

Manager from Kiev
Joined February 2022
9
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Irina Kolpakova
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Vitaliia Yurchenia
April 13, 2022 10:37 am
Infobox
Also known as
1958 - Chopiniana (telepectacle) 1960 - Choreographic miniatures (film-ballet) 1970 - Ladies and the Bully (telepectacle) 1970 - One of us - Kitri in the ballet "Don Quixote"
Known for
Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR
Location
Russia
Russia
Nationality
Russia
Russia
Occupation
‌
political figure
BjergsenBjergsen was edited byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
February 24, 2022 5:40 pm
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Bjergsen

Danish pro gamer

Søren Bjerg (born February 21, 1996), better known as Bjergsen (/ˈbjərɡsɪn/ (audio speaker iconlisten)), is a Danish professional League of Legends player for Team Liquid. He formally played for Team SoloMid spending seven years as the starting midlaner, and one year as head coach for their League of Legends Championship Series (LCS)

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Bjerg was born on February 21, 1996, in Denmark.He grew up in Mejdal, Holstebro with his two brothers.Prior to League of Legends, Bjerg played several games casually, including Counter Strike Global Offensive, World of Warcraft, Hearthstone, and Diablo 2.

Bjerg joined professional League of Legends in 2013 as a member of the Copenhagen Wolves in the European League of Legends Championship Series. Due to age restrictions put in place by Riot Games, Bjerg was unable to play with the Copenhagen Wolves until Week 3. For the first two weeks, he was temporarily replaced by the team's substitute player, cowTard. After he turned 17 years old on February 21, he joined the main lineup and played in the remaining matches. After finding success with CW, his team was acquired by and re-branded as Ninjas in Pyjamas (NiP) for the Summer Split of the EU LCS.

Infobox
Also known as
Western Wolves.Team-LDLC Copenhagen Wolven .Ninjas in Pyjamas.Team SoloMid.Team Liquid
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/bjergsen/
Known for
As player: 2012 Western Wolves 2012 Team-LDLC 2012–2013 Copenhagen Wolves 2013 Ninjas in Pyjamas 2013–2020 Team SoloMid 2021–present Team Liquid As coach: 2020–2021 Team SoloMid
LinkedIn
https://linktr.ee/bjergsen
Nationality
Denmark
Denmark
Twitter
https://twitter.com/bjergsen
PerkZPerkZ was edited byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
February 24, 2022 5:32 pm
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PerkZ

Luka Perković (born September 30, 1998), better known as Perkz (previously stylized as PERKZ and before that as PerkZ), is a Croatian professional League of Legends player for Team Vitality.

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Luka Perković (born September 30, 1998), better known as Perkz (previously stylized as PERKZ and before that as PerkZ), is a Croatian professional League of Legends player for Team Vitality. From 2015 to 2020, Perkz was a member of G2 Esports, when the team became the first European organization to win the Mid-Season Invitational in 2019. He reached the World Championship final in 2019, and is the only player to ever win eight LEC titles. In November 2020, Perkz left G2 to join LCS organization Cloud9 for the 2021 season. He is widely regarded as one of the best western players in League of Legends history.[4]

Infobox
Also known as
Perkz
Known for
https://www.twitch.tv/c9perkz
Location
Croatia
Croatia
Nationality
Croatia
Croatia
Occupation
League of Legends
League of Legends
Birthplace
Croatia
Croatia
Twitter
https://twitter.com/perkz
Ian SimmonsIan Simmons was edited byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
February 24, 2022 5:24 pm
Infobox
Also known as
University of London (BSc,PhD.) Scientific career
Author of
Ian Simmons
Ian Simmons
‌
Simmons I.G. 1982. Biogeographical processes. London : Allen & Unwin.
‌
Simmons I.G., M. Tooley (eds.) 1981. The Environment in British Prehistory. Duckworth.
Educated at
University of Bristol
University of Bristol
DoubleliftDoublelift was edited byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
February 24, 2022 5:23 pm
Infobox
Also known as
known as Doublelift, is an American content creator, streamer, and former professional League of Legends player. He previously played for Counter Logic Gaming, Team Liquid and Team SoloMid.
Known for
Counter Logic Gaming,Team SoloMid,Team Liquid
DoubleliftDoublelift was edited byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doublelift#2012"
February 24, 2022 5:18 pm
Timeline  (+5 events) (+6740 characters)

2018

Before the start of the 2018 NA LCS season, Team SoloMid announced they would be parting ways with Peng, citing a desire for a stronger shot-caller in the bottom lane. On the same day, Team Liquid announced Peng would be returning along with his ex-Counter Logic Gaming teammates Xmithie and Pobelter. The team finished 4th place in the Spring Split regular season, securing a spot in the playoffs with a 12–8 record behind his former team TSM. Team Liquid defeated Cloud9 3–0 in the quarterfinals and Echo Fox 3–1 in the semifinals to make it to the Team Liquid's first ever final.

A week before the final, Peng learned that his mother Wei Ping Shen was killed and his father Guojon Peng seriously injured after his older brother Yihong Peng allegedly stabbed them in their family home in San Juan Capistrano California. Peng posted on Twitlonger "I'm still processing this news and joining up with my dad and little brother to make sure they're ok and the proper arrangements are being made. I'll likely be quiet on social media while I work through this. I hope you all understand and support me as you always have in the past." In an interview with Machinima in 2013, Peng had said his older brother was his biggest influence on his life and career, and that he had regrets with his falling out with his parents and wished to make amends in the future, but with his busy career "right now I can't do that, I'm too busy." Despite the pressure faced during this event, Steve Arhancet, owner and co-CEO of Team Liquid, announced that Doublelift would not be taking time off and was determined to play in the final as planned. In the final, Team Liquid convincingly defeated 100 Thieves 3–0 and won its first league championship.

In the summer split 2018, Doublelift and Team Liquid picked up where they left off in spring. A tightly contested regular season saw Team Liquid come out with the number one seed by only a single game over Cloud9, qualifying them for a bye in the first round and a guaranteed spot in the semi-finals. Matched up against 100 Thieves, Doublelift and Team liquid cruised to a 3–1 series victory to move on to a spot in the finals against Cloud9. On the eve of the NA LCS finals, Doublelift was awarded a long-awaited NA LCS MVP for the summer split. This was his first MVP award. Team Liquid easily defeated Cloud9 3–0 in the finals to capture back to back North American LCS titles and looked towards a strong showing at Worlds 2018. However, they were eliminated in the group stage by KT Rolster and Edward Gaming.[citation needed]

2017

Before the start of the 2017 season, Team SoloMid announced that Peng would be taking a hiatus from professional League of Legends during the spring split, saying "it's time for a small break." While he would remain contracted to the team, he would be streaming full-time until his return to professional play in the summer when, according to Team SoloMid owner Andy Dinh, he would have to compete with his replacement to return to the starting roster.In the past, Peng has spoken out about the never-ending competitive schedule for professional League of Legends. After representing North America in the All-Star 2013 in Shanghai, Peng said in a Reddit AMA "I'm just tired of playing all day every day, and I want a goddamn break but it's not possible to get one." In a Reddit AMA in 2014, Peng said "Most people who look at pros think that we live the dream life when in reality you either practice 16 hours a day or lose and end up frustrated. Sometimes you practice 16 hours a day and still end up losing." One month later, Team SoloMid announced that WildTurtle would be Peng's replacement for the 2017 spring split. In an interview, teammate Bjergsen agreed with Dinh's initial announcement that Peng would need to compete with his replacement, saying "I want WildTurtle to succeed and I wasn't just sitting around waiting for Peter because I wanted someone who was committed, and like I said I was disappointed and I felt he wasn't very committed. I didn't feel like he should just have the luxury of going out and making a lot of money [streaming] and returning to the team... No matter how good of a friend they are to me, if someone decides he's just going to take six months off and he thinks he's can just reenter the team, that's just not okay with me because I think everyone has to earn their spot."

More than halfway through the spring season and threatened by relegation, Team Liquid announced that Peng would temporarily be joining the team and would be released back to Team SoloMid at the end of the spring split,[17] sparking controversy due to concerns of a conflict of interest when Peng inevitably competed against Team SoloMid while signed to Team Liquid. Team Liquid owner Steve Arhancet responded that Riot Games approved the trade after the team demonstrated that no other player in that role would be suitable for the team.

2015

CLG and Peng were fined on January 6, 2015, after being found guilty of poaching ZionSpartan. CLG was fined $2,000 while Peng was fined $2,500. Furthermore, CLG was restricted from fielding ZionSpartan as a player or coach for the first week of the 2015 LCS Spring Split.

For the first eight weeks of the spring split, CLG were never lower in the standings than tied for second place. At the end they lost a second-place tie breaker to Cloud9 and so ended up in third place in the regular season. Ultimately, CLG lost to Team Liquid in the quarterfinals and ended the split tied for fifth place with Gravity Gaming.

Peng was benched during the Summer LCS due to an injury incurred from playing basketball.

Peng at the 2015 League of Legends World Championship

In August Peng helped CLG win their first ever LCS Split playoff title.[10] The victory also qualified them for the 2015 League of Legends World Championship. At Worlds CLG failed to make the bracket and finished 12/13th. On October 31, CLG informed Peng that they were not going to re-sign him. Immediately after CLG released a statement, Team SoloMid announced that Peng would be joining as their new AD Carry, replacing long tenured AD Carry WildTurtle

2013

On February 27, 2013, CLG participated in the Riot Season 3 North American League Championship Series Spring Split.

2012

CLG prime would attend the 2012 MLG Fall Championship in Dallas on November 2 through 4th. In the first round they faced the Korean powerhouse NaJin Sword, where they were routed in two lopsided matches. Falling to the losers bracket, CLG Prime would sweep Curse Gaming in round one, and then pick up a close 2–1 series against another NA team Dignitas. They faced their sister team CLG EU in Round 3 and lost 2–1 and were eliminated from the tournament. CLG Prime finished in 4th with $2,500 in winnings.
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political figure
was created byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
"Created via: Web app"
February 24, 2022 5:05 pm
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political figure

‌
Simmons I.G., M. Tooley (eds.) 1981. The Environment in British Prehistory. Duckworth.
was created byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
"Created via: Web app"
February 24, 2022 4:56 pm
‌

Simmons I.G., M. Tooley (eds.) 1981. The Environment in British Prehistory. Duckworth.

‌
Simmons I.G. 1982. Biogeographical processes. London : Allen & Unwin.
was created byVitaliia Yurchenia profile picture
Vitaliia Yurchenia
"Created via: Web app"
February 24, 2022 4:56 pm
‌

Simmons I.G. 1982. Biogeographical processes. London : Allen & Unwin.