T1 Triumph over Gen.G in Five-Game Series to Secure Final MSI Spot

T1 Triumph over Gen.G in Five-Game Series to Secure Final MSI Spot

14 Jun, 2026, 14:59

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Last updated: 14 Jun, 2026, 14:59

After an incredible face-off between the two teams, T1 have emerged as the victor, thereby securing the final LCK spot to League of Legends MSI 2026. Despite being pushed to Silver Scrapes by a mounting Gen.G, T1 was successful in surpassing their perennial domestic rivals — this time.  

T1 Find Succor at the End of the Road

After a successful Round 1-2 campaign, T1 found themselves faced against Hanwha Life Esports (HLE) in the Upper Bracket of the ‘Road to MSI’ campaign. However, a combination of middling form from T1 and an HLE that has looked indomitable all season long thus far would make it a lie to call that series a true contest for the latter.  

Following HLE’s successful qualification to the Mid-Season Invitational (MSI), a first-ever for the organization’s history books, there was one spot remaining. T1 were not eliminated from contention yet, but they would have to play either Gen.G/KT Rolster for it. 

Gen.G’s subsequent victory over KT Rolster then set the stage for a magnificent crescendo in the final bout of ‘Road to MSI’. For what could be more appropriate than having T1 and Gen.G face off in a do-or-die Bo5 (Best-of-Five) series to earn the final spot.

T1-Gen.G Deliver Silver Scrapes

Gen.G was the first to draw blood, taking the first game of the series off crucial team fights that gave T1 no quarter. The opening gambit duo of Kim “Canyon” Geon-bu on the Lee Sin and Joo “Duro” Min-kyu on the Camille powered Gen.G’s incredible engage speed and was further propelled by a masterclass performance from Jeong “Chovy” Ji-hoon on the Galio.

T1 slammed back with wins in Games 2 and 3, largely off the back of team fight wins in the critical later points of the game. Game 2 had Gen.G draft a disengage draft while T1 pulled out classics such as Choi “Doran” Hyeon-joon’s Rumble, which found great success. It was, however, Game 3 that came down to the wire. After draft shenanigans saw Faker on Sion to facilitate a Doran Olaf counter-pick, the 2 teams traded blows before T1 finally found the right engage to tear through Gen.G’s backline.

Just when it looked like T1 had their rivals backed into the corner, Gen.G forced their way back into contention with a Game 4 win, despite T1’s lead. Kim “Peyz” Su-hwan, in particular, found himself in an extraordinarily fed but precarious position as the team’s only real threat to Gen.G. Faced with a highly mobile and explosive team composition, T1 was unable to find purchase in the late minutes of the game.

In the final game of the series, brilliant maneuvering by T1 in the draft phase landed them a monstrous team composition that included Lee “Faker” Sang-hyeok’s signature Ryze and Doran’s Gragas. Gen.G’s bright hope, was Canyon's ever-comfortable Nidalee.

In the relative quietness of the early game, with only small skirmishes, T1 scaled steadily. Despite Canyon’s multiple attempts to find purchase in the game, T1 offered no cracks, managing to scale, in the mid-game, past the point where Gen.G could contest them, snowballing into a victory for the former.

T1’s new generation AD Carry Peyz was undoubtedly the MVP for his team this series, delivering above and beyond in the most crucial moments. Credit: LCK
T1’s new generation AD Carry Peyz was undoubtedly the MVP for his team this series, delivering above and beyond in the most crucial moments. Credit: LCK

T1’s victory in the series delivers them satisfaction at the end of one of the better domestic runs we’ve seen from them in recent times, the final qualifying spot to MSI 2026, and their 2nd consecutive victory over Gen.G this year.

T1 Return to the MSI Stage

After a 2nd place finish at last year’s MSI, T1 has succeeded in securing their return this year to the global stage after missing out on First Stand. Despite this being T1’s 9th MSI and 5th consecutive appearance, they have failed to lift the trophy every attendance since 2017. Gen.G, on the other hand, have been the defending MSI champions for the last 2 years. Their absence at MSI 2026 unfortunately means the throne will be undefended come the end of June.

Gen.G will not be present at MSI 2026 to defend their title. Credit: Cesar Galeao/Riot Games
Gen.G will not be present at MSI 2026 to defend their title. Credit: Cesar Galeao/Riot Games

Whether T1 have the mettle to claim the MSI throne remains to be seen. Individually, the team looks stronger than past iterations at this point in the year. But what form their international adversaries will arrive to Daejeon can mean all the difference as T1’s international campaign begins for the year.


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Featured Image Credit: Liu YiCun/Riot Games

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