The spirit of Easter generally centers around reconnecting with family members, celebration and relaxation. But for the Mallant family in Hamburg, Germany, Easter Sunday came with a twist, as they watched the Unicorns of Love fight for a spot in the European League Championship Series finals.

Fabian Mallant, known as Sheepy in the League of Legends scene, coached the squad through a nerve-wracking best-of-five series against Misfits while his parents cheered through two victories, sending him regularly scheduled updates on how things were at home. When the third game brought defeat, Sheepy received these updates at an accelerated rate.

"My parents are generally always stressed out when we're playing," said Sheepy. "[They] sent me a picture while we were playing here of them being on the couch. When we lost the game, they were all, 'Oh my god!' I heard my mother couldn't even stay in front of the TV because she's getting too excited."

Sheepy's parents have been on board since the start of his journey through the LCS. His father, Jos Mallant, even took on ownership duties when the squad qualified for the professional league. In a way, it was also their semifinals.

"Since the beginning, since we're not coming from a big organization, and we didn't have all the people and management coming in, we had to look out for ourselves," Sheepy recalled. "It was natural for us that the people that were closest to me were helping out and were supporting me with any kind of help that they could."

One game later, the Mallants had cause to celebrate, as Sheepy's squad closed the series decisively. They had known that UoL would be playing, but a finals appearance made the event even sweeter.

"We go to Hamburg and the whole family is coming," Sheepy said. "It's one of the greatest things -- that you have people that are supporting you like this and are there when you really need them. Hamburg finals, for everyone, will be absolutely mind-blowing."

The Unicorns of Love are a pro League of Legends team in the European League Championship Series. Provided by Riot Games

It's been a long split for the Unicorns of Love, if you count the offseason.

After a narrow elimination at the hands of Splyce (3-2) in the 2016 European LCS Regionals, the squad's focus shifted to 2017. Top laner Kiss "Vizicsacsi" Tamas and support Zdravets "Hylissang" Iliev Galabov were on board and so was rookie-turned-sensation Fabian "Exileh" Schubert in the mid lane. Spirits were high as they marched onward to an Intel Extreme Masters San Jose title in December 2016, but change was fast approaching.

Fresh out of a victorious Turkish Champions League summer campaign came Andrei "Xerxe" Dragomir, a jungler that UoL simply could not ignore. If his performance during the TCL wasn't enough, the impression he had made on Vizicsacsi surely did.

"Csacsi and Xerxe were duo-queueing before and Csacsi knew that this guy was insanely talented," said Sheepy. "He told us that we should give him a shot to go for it."

"Xerxe was showing promise already from his history," he added. "He didn't die a single time in the finals match when [Dark Passage] qualified as a Wild Card region. When we scrimmed with him, he seemed to be very confident on the champions he's playing, and he seemed to be someone that is very strong at the game. That was exactly what we looked for in the jungle position: someone who's willing to improve, who's humble, but is also confident and who is adapting. Not somebody who is second-guessing himself constantly."

Xerxe's hire was hardly a risk. His success (and the team's success by proxy) was a matter of fast-tracking his development, a matter that "HyliCsacsi" and Sheepy tended to. Fast forward to the end of the season and his performance warranted the 2017 EU LCS Rookie of the Spring Split award.

However, his arrival to the lineup was not the only roster change, as Kim "Veritas" Kyoung-min left the squad on late notice, prompting UoL to sign Samuel "Samux" Fernández Fort. In contrast to Xerxe, the Samux move was not a surefire one.

"We had the choice between some ADCs that were talented but not stage proven," Sheepy said. "From all the choices we had, we felt that Samux had the most talent."

Unicorns of Love manager Romain "Khagneur" Bigeard shows off his team pride at the EU LCS summer 2016 finals. Provided by Riot Games

Samux grew into a stabilizing anchor for the team with performances that were reliable at worst and dazzling at best. This translated outside of Summoners Rift as well.

"He's motivating people to give it their all," added Sheepy.

Mixing and matching the right personnel is one thing, building chemistry is another matter. The Unicorns of Love had growing pains, but they overcame them. In the end, the only thing left was to keep the players focused on winning. And learning.

"After the initial figuring-out-each-other [phase], it felt really comfortable practicing, and everyone had kind of the same goal," he said. "After that, it was focus on success, becoming better, and chasing after what is really important. We could show how strong we were in the beginning of the split. We were just a new team, with new people, and every day I'm learning something. We're improving, as we should."

UoL's initial difficulties went unnoticed to the untrained eye as the squad steamrolled to a perfect start in Group B, but it encountered defeat one week before IEM Katowice against G2 Esports after a risky attempt to destroy the nexus backfired.

After that, UoL lost to the Flash Wolves. Their experience holding scrimmages and playing against the Taiwanese team shaped the remainder of the season, as UoL took note of what made them so successful.

"Those guys were just insane. They played smartly with their champions, they were playing on the limit [and were] really energetic," said Sheepy. "Afterwards, we focused a lot more on macro as well: where to be, what to do, what's important, how do things interact. Cause and effect. From there on out, we just improved and learned more."