Ma Jae-yoon

This is a Korean name; the family name is Ma.

sAviOr

Ma Jae-yoon

Hangul 마재윤
Revised Romanization Ma Jae-yun
McCune–Reischauer Ma Chae-yun
Status Retired, banned from KeSPA events
Date of birth (1987-11-23) 23 November 1987
Games Starcraft: Brood War
Nickname(s) sAviOr, IPXZerg, The Maestro
Professional career
CJ Entus

Ma Jae-yoon (Korean: 마재윤; born 23 November 1987), known by the pseudonym sAviOr (previously IPXZerg), and dubbed The Maestro, is a former professional South Korean e-sports gamer of the real-time strategy game StarCraft. He played the Zerg race and was one of the most successful and popular players of all time.[1][2] Savior was one of several players implicated in the 2010 match fixing scandal, and as a result he was banned from KeSPA-run competition for life. After retirement of pro-gamer, he did persnal broadcast (Afreeca tv). but The Afreeca tv made him that do not broadcast anymore because he fixed the match illegally when he was pro-gamer.[3]

Team

Ma Jae-yoon was a member of CJ Entus, a professional StarCraft: Brood War e-sports team sponsored by CJ CGV, an entertainment subsidiary of the CJ Corporation.[4][5]

Success

Ma Jae-yoon after winning the 2006 Shinhan Bank Starleague

Ma Jae-yoon has been rated first in the Korean e-Sports Player's Association (KeSPA) ratings nine times.[6][7] sAviOr is widely considered to have been the most dominant professional Brood War player of 2006.[8][9] He has won three MSLs (MBCGame Starleague) and one OSL (Ongamenet Starleague). But all of these records have been removed.[10][11][12]

Decline

During the 2007–2008 seasons Ma Jae-yoon lost several important matches. He especially faltered in the latest season of matches, where he was eliminated in the first round of both the MSL and the OSL with a total record of 0–5. But all of these records have been removed.[13] One theory of his decline in performance during this time is that he was devastated and never recovered from his 0–3 loss to Kim Taek-Yong (Bisu) in the GOM TV Season 1 MSL finals on 3 March 2007;[14] and then later, in November 2007, he lost to Bisu again in the quarterfinals of the 2007 Ever OSL 1–2.[15][16]

Ma Jae-yoon was ranked 5th in the March 2008 KeSPA ranking with 1,540.5 points, he was behind Lee Jae-Dong (Jaedong) (2,400.3), Kim Taek-Yong (Bisu) (2,302.6), Song Byung-Goo (Stork) (2,219.6), and Lee Young-Ho (Flash) (1,747.5).[17][18][19]

His career hit a new low when he failed to make it past the first round in the 2008 EVER OSL. He lost to the newcomer Spear, and then to his old rival, Lee Yun Yeol (NaDa). He was demoted to the CJ Entus B-team, but his improved performance following the demotion allowed him to return to CJ Entus Team A on 21 July 2008.[20]

Ma Jae-yoon went 8–1 and won the Blizzcon 2008 tournament by defeating Nada 2–0 in the finals. Afterwards, in an interview, he stated that he "will destroyed [sic] everyone in 2009".[21]

In September 2009, Ma Jae-yoon gave an interview that said he had finally gotten over his mental state, and is quoted to be saying "Look forward to my StarLeague win". He has since been shown in the proleague each matchup.[22]

Match fixing scandal

On 13 April 2010, Ma was implicated in a cheating scandal involving several Korean pro gamers, illegal betting websites, and allegations of games being deliberately lost. By May, it was alleged that the "Maestro" had been a ring-leader in a scheme that saw at least 12 StarCraft matches deliberately lost and eleven pro-gamers (current and former) implicated. He was subsequently banned for life from professional competition[23] and it has been reported that all awards and honorary achievements have been revoked.[24]

In December 2013 sAviOr competed in the Asia Brood War Championship Open in Shanghai, winning the team contest with Team Korea.[25] KESPA expressed disappointment that Ma was allowed to compete at a Brood War tournament despite being banned for life by the organization.

Tournament results

(*) These achievements have been unrecognized by KeSPA (Korea e-Sports association)

References

  1. Bellos, Alex (2007-06-29). "Rise of the e-sports superstars". Click (BBC). Retrieved 2008-03-03.(BBC Click article claiming "...Ma Jae-yoon is the number one computer games player in the country...")
  2. DW Staff (act) (2007-06-28). "South Korea's Online Gaming Craze". Deutsche Welle (DW-World.de). Retrieved 2012-02-21.(Deutsche Welle article that says "Ma Jae-Yoon is South Korea's current StarCraft champion.")
  3. kwon, oh young (2015-10-22). "Ma jae yoon can not personal broadcast anymore.".
  4. "Team Liquid Progaming Database – Team Information – CJ Entus". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  5. "CJ Entus" (in Korean). CJ Entus. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  6. "Team Liquid Progaming Database – KeSPA Ranking". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  7. "KeSPA e-Sports" (in Korean). Korea e-Sports Association. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
  8. Live2Win (2007-03-08). "e-Sports Awards 2006". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
  9. Orome (2007-01-22). "Teamliquid Awards 2006". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
  10. "Team Liquid Progaming Database – Player Information – sAviOr". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
  11. "MBCGame" (in Korean). MBCGame. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  12. "Ongamenet" (in Korean). Ongamenet. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  13. "Team Liquid Progaming Database – sAviOr – Record & Games". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  14. Manifesto7 (2007-03-05). "sAviOr vs Bisu – MSL Finals". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  15. semioldguy (2007-11-24). "Battle Report, EVER OSL 2007 Quarterfinals Week 1". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  16. .dragoon (2007-11-30). "EVER OSL 2007 Ro8 Conclusion". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  17. "Team Liquid Progaming Database – KeSPA Ranking – March 2008". TeamLiquid.net. Archived from the original on 2008-04-11. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  18. goodjobman (2008-03-03). "March KeSPA Ranking". TeamLiquid.net. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  19. "KeSPA e-Sports March 2008 ranking" (in Korean). Korea e-Sports Association. Archived from the original on 2008-02-13. Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  20. "NEWS Savior Returns to Team A". teamliquid.net. Retrieved 2008-07-22.
  21. Savior blizzcon2008 interview. YouTube. Retrieved on 2011-05-04.
  22. Archived 23 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  23. "Players Involved in Korean Starcraft Match-Fixing Scandal Banned From the League". softpedia.com. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
  24. 포모스::포모스. Fomos.kr. Retrieved on 2011-05-04.
  25. Jung, Min-ho (December 2, 2015). "Ex-con Korean gamer recycled in China". Korea Times.

External links

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