- Source: Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2009
The 2009 Pro Tour season was the fourteenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. It began on 17 January 2009 with Grand Prix Los Angeles, and ended on 22 November 2009 with the conclusion of the 2009 World Championship in Rome. The season consisted of nineteen Grand Prixs, and four Pro Tours, located in Kyoto, Honolulu, Austin, and Rome. At the end of the season, Yuuya Watanabe was awarded the Pro Player of the Year, making him the first player to win both that title and the Rookie of the Year title which he had won two years prior. Frank Karsten, Kamiel Cornelissen, and Antoine Ruel were inducted into the Hall of Fame at the world championships in Rome.
Mode
Four Pro Tours and nineteen Grand Prixs will be held in the 2009 season. Further Pro Points will be awarded at national championships. These Pro Points will be used mainly to determine the Pro Player club levels of players participating in these events, but also decide which player will be awarded the Pro Player of the year title at the end of the season. Based on final standings Pro Points were awarded as follows:
Grand Prix – Los Angeles, Rotterdam
Pro Tour – Kyoto (27 February – 1 March 2009)
Pro Tour veteran Gabriel Nassif defeated Luis Scott-Vargas in the finals of Pro Tour Kyoto, giving him his first individual title in his ninth Top 8.
= Tournament data
=Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 381
Format: Standard, Booster Draft
Head Judge: Riccardo Tessitori
= Top 8
== Final standings
== Pro Player of the year standings
=Grand Prixs – Chicago, Hanover, Singapore, Kobe, Barcelona, Seattle
Pro Tour Honolulu (5–7 June 2009)
In his second Pro Tour finals appearance, Kazuya Mitamura defeated Pro Tour newcomer Michal Hebky.
= Tournament data
=Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 396
Format: Booster Draft, Block Constructed
Head Judge: Toby Elliot
= Top 8
== Final standings
== Pro Player of the year standings
=Grand Prixs – Sao Paulo, Boston, Brighton, Bangkok, Niigata, Prague, Melbourne
Pro Tour Austin (16–18 October 2009)
Both enjoying a comeback to the top level of Magic, Brian Kibler and Tsuyoshi Ikeda met in the finals, with Kibler winning in his second top eight in 2009.
= Tournament data
=Prize pool: $230,795
Players: 416
Format: Extended, Booster Draft
Head Judge: Riccardo Tessitori
= Top 8
== Final standings
== Pro Player of the year standings
=Grand Prixs – Tampa, Kitakyushu, Paris, Minneapolis
2009 World Championships – Rome (19–22 November 2009)
The 2009 World Championship marked several firsts in Pro Tour history. For the first time ever, eight different countries were represented in the quarterfinals, and there were no American or Japanese players in the top eight. Playing in his second Worlds top eight, André Coimbra of Portugal defeated Austrian David Reitbauer to become World Champion. In the team event, Austria finished second as well, losing to the Chinese team in the final.
= Tournament data
=Prize pool: $245,245 (individual) + $192,425 (teams)
Players: 409 (55 National teams)
Formats: Standard, Booster Draft, Extended
Team Formats: Standard, Extended, Legacy
Head Judge: Sheldon Menery
= Top 8
== Final standings
== National team competition
=China (Wu Tong, Bo Li, Zhiyang Zhang)
Austria (Benedikt Klauser, Benjamin Rozhon, Bernhard Lehner)
Czech Republic (Lukas Jaklovsky, Lukas Blohon, Jan Kotrla)
Netherlands (Kevin Grove, Niels Noorlander, Tom van Lamoen)
Pro Player of the year final standings
After the World Championship, Yuuya Watanabe was awarded the Pro Player of the year title, making him the fifth consecutive Japanese player to win the award.
Performance by country
The United States had the most Top 8 appearances at ten, but they also had by far the most players playing in the Pro Tour. With Japan at 17 they share the highest number of level 4+ professional Magic players, too.
T8 = Number of players from that country appearing in a Pro Tour Top 8; Q = Number of players from that country participating in Pro Tours; M = Median finish over all PTs; GT = Gravy Trainers (aka players with a Pro Players Club level of 4 or more) from that country created in the 2009 season; Best Player (PPts) = Player with the most Pro Points from that country, Pro Points of that player in brackets.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2009
- Magic: The Gathering Players Tour
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 1996
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2007
- List of Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour events
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 1999–2000
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2010
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 1998–99
- Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2001–02