Cheers to another weekend! This past one featured the Magic World Championship and Magic World Cup, where both a team and single player were dubbed the World Champions! Also featured was Star City Games: Portland. Let’s check out the action.

Magic World Cup (Nice, FR)

Decklists

The Magic World Cup was taken down by Denmark, who were competing with over 70 countries for the title. Team Denmark’s decks were Mardu Midrange, Blue-Black Control, and Abzan Whip. Second place went to Team Greece, which featured Temur, Mardu Midrange, and Sidisi-Whip. Let’s check out some deck numbers from the final decks.

Mythic Rare (41) Rare (175) Uncommon (75) 8x Stormbreath Dragon

6x Wingmate Roc

5x Sarkhan, the Dragonspeaker

4x Sidisi, Brood Tyrant

4x Perilous Vault

4x Ashiok, Nightmare Weaver

4x Ashcloud Phoenix

2x Soul of Theros

2x Soul of Innistrad

2x Sorin, Solemn Visitor 8x Llanowar Wastes

8x Goblin Rabblemaster

8x Crackling Doom

8x Courser of Kruphix

8x Butcher of the Horde

8x Bloodstained Mire

7x Sylvan Caryatid

7x Polluted Delta

7x Hero’s Downfall

6x Temple of Triumph

6x Temple of Silence

6x Hornet Queen

6x Chained to the Rocks

6x Battlefield Forge

5x Temple of Malady

5x Caves of Koilos

4x Yavimaya Coast

4x Wooded Foothills

4x Windswept Heath

4x Temple of Deceit

4x Siege Rhino

4x Savage Knuckleblade

4x Rattleclaw Mystic

4x Dig Through Time

4x Crater’s Claws

4x Boon Satyr

3x Whip of Erebos

3x Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth

3x Thoughtseize

3x Mana Confluence

2x Whip of Erebos

2x Temple of Mystery

2x Temple of Epiphany

2x Shivan Reef

2x Doomwake Giant

1x Utter End

1x Temple of Abandon

1x Silence the Believers

1x AEtherspouts 8x Nomad Outpost

8x Murderous Cut

8x Hordeling Outburst

7x Seeker of the Way

5x Opulent Palace

4x Stoke the Flames

4x Sandsteppe Citadel

4x Heir of the Wilds

4x Frontier Bivouac

4x Dissolve

4x Bile Blight

3x Temur Charm

3x Stubborn Denial

2x Jace’s Ingenuity

2x Drown in Sorrow

2x Despise

2x Banishing Light

1x Sultai Charm

Sideboard (90) 7x Disdainful Stroke

7x Anger of the Gods

5x Read the Bones

5x End Hostilities

4x Thoughtseize

4x Magma Spray

4x Glare of Heresy

4x Elspeth, Sun’s Champion

4x Drown in Sorrow

3x Reclamation Sage

3x Negate

3x Hornet Nest

3x Erase

3x Bile Blight

3x Ashiok, Nightmare Weaver

3x Arc Lightning

2x Utter End

2x Stormbreath Dragon

2x Prognostic Sphinx

2x Nissa, Worldwaker

2x Doomwake Giant

2x Dig Through Time

2x Chandra, Pyromaster

2x Back to Nature

1x Whip of Erebos

1x Sultai Charm

1x Stubborn Denial

1x Silence the Believers

1x Pharika, God of Affliction

1x Pearl Lake Ancient

1x Duneblast

1x Divination

1x AEtherspouts

Main deck cards that grab my attention are [card]Stormbreath Dragon[/card], [card]Crackling Doom[/card], [card]Butcher of the Horde[/card], [card]Murderous Cut[/card], and [card]Hordeling Outburst[/card]. Stormbreath Dragon did very well for itself in the World Cup, which means that once Theros becomes harder to find, Stormbreath could be in for a price increase. Crackling Doom has been very popular lately as well, and I expect that if you want to play Mardu you should pick up your copies sooner rather than later, along with Butcher of the Horde.

Notable mythic rares include [card]Wingmate Roc[/card] (despite its price lowering, the roc should go back up in price over its Standard life once Khans becomes scarce) [card]Sidisi, Brood Tyrant[/card], [card]Perilous Vault[/card], [card]Ashiok, Nightmare Weaver[/card], and two each of [card]Soul of Theros[/card] and [card]Soul of Innistrad[/card]. Clearly the souls are not on the level of titans of yore, but they still see play every once in a while. If you like Souls, picking them up at bulk mythic prices is fine.

Notable rares include eight Bloodstained Mire (which is currently the cheapest fetchland in Khans, by the way—not that now is the time to pick them up, just something to note in case it goes down even further) and six [card]Chained to the Rocks[/card].

For sideboards, popular choices included [card]Anger of the Gods[/card] (which appears to be trending upwards in price) and [card]End Hostilities[/card].

There were certainly small bits of innovation going on in each of the lists, but the card numbers indicate that many of the same established cards, like [card]Goblin Rabblemaster[/card], are still powerful forces in the current format.

Magic World Championship (Nice, FR)

Decklists

Shahar Shenhar took down the World Championships again—the first time this has ever happened two years in a row for a single player! Congratulations to Shahar for performing so well on the world stage. The win was much deserved.

For Khans Standard, Shahar chose to pilot his slightly tweaked version of Sidisi-Whip that featured two Ashioks in the main deck along with a [card]Soul of Innistrad[/card] for some late game reach. Other than this, the list was still running three [card]Hornet Queen[/card], three [card]Whip of Erebos[/card], and four Sidisi, and all the other necessary components from other Sidisi-Whip decks.

Second place went to Patrick Chapin, who like Ari Lax at the Pro Tour, decided to go with Abzan Midrange for his Standard deck choice. Notables from Chapin’s list included two [card]Brimaz, King of Oreskos[/card] and only one [card]Wingmate Roc[/card]. Everything else in the deck was streamlined based on the existing archetype and isn’t anything new we haven’t seen before.

The other Top 4 decks included Yuuya Watanabe’s Jeskai Tokens and Kentaro Yamamoto’s version of Sidisi-Whip. Similar to the deck’s in the Magic World Cup, these decks featured cards like [card]Jeskai Ascendency[/card] and Hornet Queen to bring the beats.

SCG Open: Portland – Standard (Portland, OR)

Decklists

The Top 16 in Portland included three Abzan Midrange, two Abzan Reanimator, three Jeskai Tokens, two Mardu Midrange, and five other archetypes.

Sheldon Freerksen took down the Standard portion of the event, beating Brad Nelson’s Jeskai Tokens in the finals. Freerksen’s tech included a maindeck [card]Duneblast[/card] and two Read the Bones while Nelson played four [card]Treasure Cruise[/card] and two [card]Chandra, Pyromaster[/card] to help give himself reach throughout the event. Treasure Cruise is still showing its domination even in Standard, while Jeskai Ascendancy keeps showing its utility in both combo and non-combo decks.

Gerry Thompson placed in the Top 4 of the event playing Abzan Reanimator, which is also the fourth-place deck. Similar to Sidisi-Whip but playing white over blue, these decks utilize the power of Whip of Erebos in order to bring out powerful creatures from the graveyard. Being able to whip up a [card]Siege Rhino[/card] sure provides a ton of value.

The rest of the Top 16 includes decks that have all shown up in one form or another across other recent Standard tournaments. [card]Chandra, Pyromaster[/card] is being played in red decks now to help provide card advantage and unblockability, which is something to note. A few Top 16 decks in Portland were jamming Treasure Cruise into existing builds as well, like many players at the World Championships and World Cup did.

SCG Open: Portland – Legacy (Portland, OR)

Decklists

In Legacy, Maverick took down the event piloted by David McDarby. McDarby’s build included a [card]Green Sun’s Zenith[/card] package along with four [card]Knight of the Reliquary[/card], efficient beaters and hate bears, and disruption. Maverick is an interesting choice in a field of Treasure Cruise and Delver, since it can be a very hard deck to pilot if you aren’t familiar with the many intricacies of the deck.

Speaking of Delver, UR Delver came in second, fifth, and thirtheen at Portland. Other notable decks include Burn taking third, Shardless Bant taking eleventh, Jeskai Ascendancy Combo, and UG Cloudpost.

One interesting card choice is three [card]Death’s Shadow[/card] in the seventh place Sultai Delver list. Death’s Shadow is a quirky card that spiked back in April 2013 due to its interaction with [card]Varolz, the Scar Striped[/card] in Modern but has dropped back in price over time since that synergy never surfaced in a well-placing deck. However, it could experience another price upswing due to this inclusion.

Shardless Bant was an interesting deck choice. It included such cards as [card]Thopter Foundry[/card] and [card]Sword of the Meek[/card], along with a mish-mash of artifacts that could be fetched with [card]Enlightened Tutor[/card] and [card]Stoneforge Mystic[/card]. The deck name comes from [card]Shardless Agent[/card] and [card]Ancestral Vision[/card] being in the deck, of course. This deck is so out of left field I’m not sure what to make of it—did Neil Henly just not have the pieces to the other decks and decided to go for whatever was in his binder? Who knows, but I do like the Thopter Foundry and Sword of the Meek synergy in a field full of UR Delver and Burn decks.

Jeskai Ascendancy Combo has made its way into Legacy due to the hype around the World’s Modern decks brewing with it. Legacy players then determined that yes, indeed it is also fine in Legacy. Fatestitcher has already closed its window for financial opportunity—wait for the drop in price, then get in once the hype has died down. [card]Mental Note[/card] is an interesting card choice. Foils of this are still on the cheap at $1 or less if you feel like playing Ascendancy Combo in Legacy.

Wrapping Up

That’s it for this week! Khans certainly is making an impact on every format out there including Vintage! We haven’t seen this much shakeup since [card]Deathrite Shaman[/card] was printed. Keep up the good work, Wizards, with a few more blocks like this, Magic will be diverse for quite some time.