Year | Winner | Held in |
---|---|---|
1994 | Zak Dolan[?] (USA) | Milwaukee, WI, USA |
1995 | Alexander Blumke[?] (Switzerland) | Seattle, WA, USA |
1996 | Tom Chanpheng[?] (Australia) | Seattle, WA, USA |
1997 | Jakub Slemr[?] (Czech Republic) | Seattle, WA, USA |
1998 | Brian Selden[?] (USA) | Seattle, WA, USA |
1999 | Kai Budde[?] (Germany) | Yokohama, Japan |
2000 | Jon Finkel[?] (USA) | Brussels, Belgium |
2001 | Tom van de Logt[?] (Netherlands) | Toronto, Canada |
2002 | Carlos Eduardo Romão[?] (Brazil) | Sydney, Australia |
2003 | TBD | Berlin, Germany |
|
The 2003 world championship will be held from August 6 to August 10 at the Estrel Hotel (http://www.estrel.de/) in Berlin, Germany. The total prize money awarded to the top 64 finishers will be 208,130 USD, of which the new world champion will receive 35,000 USD.
The 2002 world championship (Complete coverage (http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=sideboard/events/worlds02))
The 2002 world championship was held from August 13 to August 18, 2002 at Fox Studios (http://www.foxstudios.com.au/home.asp) in Sydney, Australia; 24-year old Carlos "Jaba" Romão from São Paulo, Brazil came out as world champion, garnering a prize of 35,000 USD with the help of his blue/black "Psychatog" deck. Other finalists included Mark Ziegner[?] from Germany (2nd place), Diego Ostrovich[?] from Argentina (3rd place) and Dave Humpherys[?] from the USA (4th place), as well as malaysian national champion Sim Han How[?] (5th place), John Larkin[?] from Ireland (6th place), Tuomas Kotiranta[?] from Finland (7th place) and Ken Krouner[?] from the USA (8th place).
Carlos' winning deck consisted of the following cards:
Main Deck:
Sideboard:
The 2001 world championship (Complete coverage (http://www.wizards.com/sideboard/event.asp?event=Worlds2001))
The 2001 world championship was held from August 8 to August 12, 2001 at the Metro Toronto Convention Center (http://www.mtccc.com/) in Toronto, Canada; Tom van de Logt[?] from the Netherlands came out as the new world champion, garnering a prize of 35,000 USD for his victory (as well as another 1,000 USD for the success of the dutch team he was part of). Other finalists included Alex Borteh[?] from the USA (2nd place), Antoine Rel[?] from France (3rd place) and Andrea Santin[?] from Italy (4th place), as well as Michael Turian[?] from the USA (5th place), Jan Tomcani[?] from the Slovak Republic (6th place), Tommi Hovi[?] from Finland (7th place) and John Ormerod[?] from England (8th place).
Tom's winning black-red deck consisted of the following cards:
Main Deck:
Sideboard:
(to be written)
(to be written)
(to be written)
(to be written)
(to be written)
(to be written)
(to be written)
This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by fixing it.
Search Encyclopedia
|