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Sneaky (gamer)

Zachary Scuderi, better known as Sneaky, is a professional League of Legends player, streamer, and crossplayer. He played AD Carry for Cloud9 of the League of Legends Championship Series North America until 2019.[1][2][3][4] He won the 2013 Summer NA LCS and 2014 Spring NA LCS with Cloud9.[5] Scuderi is also known for his cosplays of anime and video game characters.[6][7]

Sneaky
Scuderi at the 2016 NA LCS Finals
Personal information
NameZachary Scuderi
Born (1994-03-19) March 19, 1994 (age 30)
NationalityAmerican
Career information
GamesLeague of Legends
Playing career2012–2020
RoleADC
Team history
2012Ordinance Gaming
2012Absolute Legends NA
2012–2013Pulse Esports
2013Team Dignitas
2013Quantic Gaming
20132019Cloud9
Career highlights and awards

Sneaky became an independent full-time streamer on Twitch, leaving the professional scene in January 2020. However, despite not playing professionally, he has stated that he is not retired.[8][9][10]

Career edit

Originally a Mid Laner for Ordinance Gaming, he quickly transitioned into an AD Carry and bounced around on several NA teams, one of which included Team Dignitas.

Quantic Gaming edit

Sneaky joined Quantic Gaming on April 6, 2013, with the Balls, Meteos, Hai, and LemonNation.

Cloud9 edit

2015 season edit

Cloud9 was the North American team fan-voted to IEM San Jose. They defeated paiN Gaming 2–0, Alliance 2–1, and then Unicorns of Love 3–0 to win the tournament. Sneaky capped off the finals against UOL with a game-winning pentakill on Corki.

Due to their IEM San Jose victory, Cloud9 qualified for IEM Katowice in March. They lost their only two games, first to GE Tigers and then to yoe Flash Wolves, and finished in 7th/8th place. Domestically, they underperformed at the start of the season and were in 8th place at the end of the second week of the spring LCS split. However, they improved over the course of the season, ending with a second-place finish behind Team SoloMid and a playoff bye; after beating Team Liquid 3–2, Cloud9 lost to TSM 1–3 in the finals and finished the split overall in second place.

Cloud9 replaced mid laner Hai with Incarnati0n at the start of the Summer Split due to Hai's retirement. They performed poorly for the first five weeks of the split and replaced Meteos with Hai going into the sixth week. With Hai back on the team, Cloud9's record improved from 3–7 to 6–12 by the end of the split, and they finished in 7th place after a tie-breaker victory against Team 8, narrowly avoiding relegations and retaining their Championship Points, though they did not qualify for playoffs. In the Regional Finals Gauntlet, Cloud9 reverse-swept both Gravity Gaming and Team Impulse before beating Team Liquid 3–1 in the finals. Their fourteen games played over the course of three days gave them North America's third seed to the 2015 Season World Championship, Cloud9's third-consecutive Worlds. Notably, Sneaky played Vayne in four games (3–1) and Draven twice (2–0), and had a 10.09 KDA across Cloud9's victories; he also received the MVP title for the final series of the gauntlet.

Considered an underdog at Worlds, Cloud9 were placed into Group B along with Fnatic, ahq, and Invictus Gaming and expected to place last. Instead, they surprised with an undefeated 3–0 first week. In the second week, Cloud9 needed only one win to advance to the quarterfinals but were unable to find it, losing four games in a row including a tiebreaker loss to ahq. They placed third in their group, ahead of only Invictus Gaming.

2016 season edit

For the 2016 season, Cloud9 added two new players – Rush and Bunny FuFuu – and moved Hai to support, with the intention of splitting time with Bunny. However, after two losses with Bunny and two wins with Hai in the spring split, they committed to starting Hai full-time and rose to a 67% winrate, with a third-place seed in the playoffs. However, despite a seeding advantage, the team lost to TSM in the first round and were eliminated. Sneaky ended up losing the Worlds Quarterfinals with Cloud9 against Samsung Galaxy.

2017 season edit

For the 2017 season, Cloud9 dropped Meteos and added Ray, the top laner from Apex Gaming, as well as Contractz, the jungler from Cloud9's Challenger Series team. Cloud9 proved strong with this roster, finishing in 2nd place with a 70% win rate during the regular split, the highest win rate out of any team. Following their spring success, Cloud9 had a reasonably strong summer split, finishing 4th place. Cloud9 ended up qualifying to the 2017 League of Legends World Championship through the NA Regional qualifier, taking a convincing 3–1 victory over Counter Logic Gaming. Their Worlds journey ended in the quarterfinals losing 2–3 against Team WE of the League of Legends Pro League.

2018 season edit

Cloud9 entered the 2018 season replacing Contractz with former TSM jungler Svenskeren, and adding rookie top laner Licorice following Impact's move to Team Liquid. After a strong start to the split and vying for a playoff bye, Cloud9 faltered in the final weeks of the regular season and entered playoffs as the 5th seed after a series of tiebreakers. Cloud9 were defeated 3-0 by Team Liquid in the quarterfinals.

Just days before the start of the summer split, Cloud9 owner Jack Etienne and Coach Reapered shocked the League of Legends competitive community by announcing that Sneaky along with Jensen and Smoothie were being benched in favor of Cloud9 Academy players Keith, Goldenglue, and Zeyzal respectively, citing motivation issues and concern the starting roster would not qualify for playoffs. Cloud9 Academy dominated the academy league, however, the LCS roster struggled and fell to last place in the standings. Smoothie left the team, but Sneaky and Jensen were reinstated to the starting roster. Cloud9 found a winning formula utilizing a 7-man roster, and the team made an undefeated run in the second round robin to secure a 2nd-place finish and playoff bye in the summer playoffs. Cloud9 faced TSM in the semifinals and defeated their storied rivals 3–2, the first time Cloud9 had done so in the post-season since the 2014 spring finals. Cloud9 faced Team Liquid in the summer finals where they would once again be defeated by Liquid 3–0.

With their 2nd-place finish in the summer split, Cloud9 were seeded into the final round of the regional qualifier for the 2018 League of Legends World Championship where they once again faced TSM. Cloud9 defeated TSM in an impressive 3-0 set and qualified for Worlds as North America's 3rd seed. Cloud9 had to go through the Worlds play-in stage, going undefeated 4–0 in their group and defeating Gambit Esports 3–2 to qualify for the group stage. They were seeded into Group B (dubbed "the group of death") with Team Vitality, defending world champions GenG Esports, and tournament favorites Royal Never Give Up. After a rocky start, Cloud9 defied predictions and escaped the group of death going 3–0 in the second round robin. They faced RNG in a tiebreaker for 1st seed, losing after a close game and entered the knockout bracket as a 2nd seed.

Cloud9 faced Afreeca Freecs in the quarterfinals where they defeated the Korean team 3–0, becoming the first team from North America to reach top 4 at Worlds in seven years. Their semifinal match against Europe's Fnatic had even greater implications as it guaranteed the appearance of a western team in the World Finals for the first time since the inaugural tournament in 2011. Fnatic defeated Cloud9 3–0. For his part in Cloud9's miracle run from last place in North America to top 4 at Worlds, Sneaky was chosen by fan vote to attend the 2018 All-Star Event.

2019 season edit

In the 2019 season, Nisqy joined as mid lane following Jensen's move to Team Liquid. Cloud9 had a strong spring split, finishing second in the regular season, but were defeated in a reverse sweep against TSM in the semi-finals. In summer Cloud9 had a strong split, but lost to Team Liquid in the finals in 5 games.

On January 15, 2020, Sneaky left the Cloud9 NA LCS Roster but remained an owner and advisor of the team.[8][4]

Post-hiatus edit

He is currently pursuing a career as a full-time Twitch streamer, though his teammates speculate he will likely make a return to professional play.[11]

On July 10, 2020, Sneaky returned for a special LCS showmatch and the old Cloud9 team are reunited with Balls, Meteos, Hai, and LemonNation in order to face off TSM Classic consisting of Dyrus, TheOddOne, VoyBoy (replacing Reginald), WildTurtle, and Xpecial.

Tournament results edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mitchell, Ferguson (June 20, 2014). . The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016.
  2. ^ Etienne, Jack (August 6, 2013). . Cloud9. Archived from the original on July 7, 2016. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  3. ^ Gafford, Travis (June 29, 2015). "Sneaky to Fans: "We'll Get There, We'll Go Back to Cloud9"". GameSpot (Interview). Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  4. ^ a b "Sneaky becomes an independent full-time streamer, will remain C9 owner and advisor". Dot Esports. January 15, 2020. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  5. ^ "Behind the ID: Zachary 'Sneaky' Scuderi". ESPN. June 28, 2016.
  6. ^ Chang, Brian (August 29, 2018). "Sneaky's back to cosplaying, but this time he's not alone". Dot Esports. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  7. ^ Newell, Adam (June 22, 2019). "Sneaky returns to his cosplaying ways with a gorgeous Divine Sword Irelia makeover". Dot Esports. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  8. ^ a b Scuderi, Zach (January 15, 2020). "Future plans!pic.twitter.com/Ll3eUaqZTW". @Sneaky. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  9. ^ "Sneaky to stream full-time after stepping back from League of Legends esports". January 16, 2020.
  10. ^ "Sneaky becomes independent full time streamer, but will remain Cloud9 owner and advisor". April 26, 2023.
  11. ^ Tyler, Erzberger (January 27, 2020). "LCS pros look back on Cloud9 AD carry Sneaky's legacy". ESPN. Retrieved February 7, 2020.

External links edit

  • Sneaky on Twitter  
  • Sneaky on Instagram
  • What is Sneaky’s Legacy?, by LoLAthlete on YouTube, published Apr 29, 2023

As of this edit, this article uses content from "Sneaky", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

sneaky, gamer, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article, tal. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Sneaky gamer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Zachary Scuderi better known as Sneaky is a professional League of Legends player streamer and crossplayer He played AD Carry for Cloud9 of the League of Legends Championship Series North America until 2019 1 2 3 4 He won the 2013 Summer NA LCS and 2014 Spring NA LCS with Cloud9 5 Scuderi is also known for his cosplays of anime and video game characters 6 7 SneakyScuderi at the 2016 NA LCS FinalsPersonal informationNameZachary ScuderiBorn 1994 03 19 March 19 1994 age 30 NationalityAmericanCareer informationGamesLeague of LegendsPlaying career2012 2020RoleADCTeam history2012Ordinance Gaming2012Absolute Legends NA2012 2013Pulse Esports2013Team Dignitas2013Quantic Gaming2013 2019Cloud9Career highlights and awards2 NA LCS championSneaky became an independent full time streamer on Twitch leaving the professional scene in January 2020 However despite not playing professionally he has stated that he is not retired 8 9 10 Contents 1 Career 1 1 Quantic Gaming 1 2 Cloud9 1 2 1 2015 season 1 2 2 2016 season 1 2 3 2017 season 1 2 4 2018 season 1 2 5 2019 season 2 Post hiatus 3 Tournament results 4 References 5 External linksCareer editOriginally a Mid Laner for Ordinance Gaming he quickly transitioned into an AD Carry and bounced around on several NA teams one of which included Team Dignitas Quantic Gaming edit Sneaky joined Quantic Gaming on April 6 2013 with the Balls Meteos Hai and LemonNation Cloud9 edit 2015 season edit Cloud9 was the North American team fan voted to IEM San Jose They defeated paiN Gaming 2 0 Alliance 2 1 and then Unicorns of Love 3 0 to win the tournament Sneaky capped off the finals against UOL with a game winning pentakill on Corki Due to their IEM San Jose victory Cloud9 qualified for IEM Katowice in March They lost their only two games first to GE Tigers and then to yoe Flash Wolves and finished in 7th 8th place Domestically they underperformed at the start of the season and were in 8th place at the end of the second week of the spring LCS split However they improved over the course of the season ending with a second place finish behind Team SoloMid and a playoff bye after beating Team Liquid 3 2 Cloud9 lost to TSM 1 3 in the finals and finished the split overall in second place Cloud9 replaced mid laner Hai with Incarnati0n at the start of the Summer Split due to Hai s retirement They performed poorly for the first five weeks of the split and replaced Meteos with Hai going into the sixth week With Hai back on the team Cloud9 s record improved from 3 7 to 6 12 by the end of the split and they finished in 7th place after a tie breaker victory against Team 8 narrowly avoiding relegations and retaining their Championship Points though they did not qualify for playoffs In the Regional Finals Gauntlet Cloud9 reverse swept both Gravity Gaming and Team Impulse before beating Team Liquid 3 1 in the finals Their fourteen games played over the course of three days gave them North America s third seed to the 2015 Season World Championship Cloud9 s third consecutive Worlds Notably Sneaky played Vayne in four games 3 1 and Draven twice 2 0 and had a 10 09 KDA across Cloud9 s victories he also received the MVP title for the final series of the gauntlet Considered an underdog at Worlds Cloud9 were placed into Group B along with Fnatic ahq and Invictus Gaming and expected to place last Instead they surprised with an undefeated 3 0 first week In the second week Cloud9 needed only one win to advance to the quarterfinals but were unable to find it losing four games in a row including a tiebreaker loss to ahq They placed third in their group ahead of only Invictus Gaming 2016 season edit For the 2016 season Cloud9 added two new players Rush and Bunny FuFuu and moved Hai to support with the intention of splitting time with Bunny However after two losses with Bunny and two wins with Hai in the spring split they committed to starting Hai full time and rose to a 67 winrate with a third place seed in the playoffs However despite a seeding advantage the team lost to TSM in the first round and were eliminated Sneaky ended up losing the Worlds Quarterfinals with Cloud9 against Samsung Galaxy 2017 season edit For the 2017 season Cloud9 dropped Meteos and added Ray the top laner from Apex Gaming as well as Contractz the jungler from Cloud9 s Challenger Series team Cloud9 proved strong with this roster finishing in 2nd place with a 70 win rate during the regular split the highest win rate out of any team Following their spring success Cloud9 had a reasonably strong summer split finishing 4th place Cloud9 ended up qualifying to the 2017 League of Legends World Championship through the NA Regional qualifier taking a convincing 3 1 victory over Counter Logic Gaming Their Worlds journey ended in the quarterfinals losing 2 3 against Team WE of the League of Legends Pro League 2018 season edit Cloud9 entered the 2018 season replacing Contractz with former TSM jungler Svenskeren and adding rookie top laner Licorice following Impact s move to Team Liquid After a strong start to the split and vying for a playoff bye Cloud9 faltered in the final weeks of the regular season and entered playoffs as the 5th seed after a series of tiebreakers Cloud9 were defeated 3 0 by Team Liquid in the quarterfinals Just days before the start of the summer split Cloud9 owner Jack Etienne and Coach Reapered shocked the League of Legends competitive community by announcing that Sneaky along with Jensen and Smoothie were being benched in favor of Cloud9 Academy players Keith Goldenglue and Zeyzal respectively citing motivation issues and concern the starting roster would not qualify for playoffs Cloud9 Academy dominated the academy league however the LCS roster struggled and fell to last place in the standings Smoothie left the team but Sneaky and Jensen were reinstated to the starting roster Cloud9 found a winning formula utilizing a 7 man roster and the team made an undefeated run in the second round robin to secure a 2nd place finish and playoff bye in the summer playoffs Cloud9 faced TSM in the semifinals and defeated their storied rivals 3 2 the first time Cloud9 had done so in the post season since the 2014 spring finals Cloud9 faced Team Liquid in the summer finals where they would once again be defeated by Liquid 3 0 With their 2nd place finish in the summer split Cloud9 were seeded into the final round of the regional qualifier for the 2018 League of Legends World Championship where they once again faced TSM Cloud9 defeated TSM in an impressive 3 0 set and qualified for Worlds as North America s 3rd seed Cloud9 had to go through the Worlds play in stage going undefeated 4 0 in their group and defeating Gambit Esports 3 2 to qualify for the group stage They were seeded into Group B dubbed the group of death with Team Vitality defending world champions GenG Esports and tournament favorites Royal Never Give Up After a rocky start Cloud9 defied predictions and escaped the group of death going 3 0 in the second round robin They faced RNG in a tiebreaker for 1st seed losing after a close game and entered the knockout bracket as a 2nd seed Cloud9 faced Afreeca Freecs in the quarterfinals where they defeated the Korean team 3 0 becoming the first team from North America to reach top 4 at Worlds in seven years Their semifinal match against Europe s Fnatic had even greater implications as it guaranteed the appearance of a western team in the World Finals for the first time since the inaugural tournament in 2011 Fnatic defeated Cloud9 3 0 For his part in Cloud9 s miracle run from last place in North America to top 4 at Worlds Sneaky was chosen by fan vote to attend the 2018 All Star Event 2019 season edit In the 2019 season Nisqy joined as mid lane following Jensen s move to Team Liquid Cloud9 had a strong spring split finishing second in the regular season but were defeated in a reverse sweep against TSM in the semi finals In summer Cloud9 had a strong split but lost to Team Liquid in the finals in 5 games On January 15 2020 Sneaky left the Cloud9 NA LCS Roster but remained an owner and advisor of the team 8 4 Post hiatus editHe is currently pursuing a career as a full time Twitch streamer though his teammates speculate he will likely make a return to professional play 11 On July 10 2020 Sneaky returned for a special LCS showmatch and the old Cloud9 team are reunited with Balls Meteos Hai and LemonNation in order to face off TSM Classic consisting of Dyrus TheOddOne VoyBoy replacing Reginald WildTurtle and Xpecial Tournament results edit1st 2013 NA LCS Summer regular season 1st 2013 NA LCS Summer playoffs 5 8th 2013 League of Legends World Championship 1st 2014 NA LCS Spring regular season 1st 2014 NA LCS Spring playoffs 1st 2014 NA LCS Summer regular season 2nd 2014 NA LCS Summer playoffs 5 8th 2014 League of Legends World Championship 2nd 2015 NA LCS Spring regular season 2nd 2015 NA LCS Spring playoffs 7th 2015 NA LCS Summer regular season 1st 2015 NA LCS Regional playoffs 9 11th 2015 League of Legends World Championship 3rd 2016 NA LCS Spring regular season 5 6th 2016 NA LCS Spring playoffs 3rd 2016 NA LCS Summer regular season 2nd 2016 NA LCS Summer playoffs 5 8th 2016 League of Legends World Championship 2nd 2017 NA LCS Spring regular season 2nd 2017 NA LCS Spring playoffs 4th 2017 NA LCS Summer regular season 5 6th 2017 NA LCS Summer playoffs 5 8th 2017 League of Legends World Championship 5th 2018 NA LCS Spring regular season 5 6th 2018 NA LCS Spring playoffs 2nd 2018 NA LCS Summer regular season 2nd 2018 NA LCS Summer playoffs 1st 2018 NA Regional Finals 3 4th 2018 League of Legends World ChampionshipReferences edit Mitchell Ferguson June 20 2014 Cloud9 s chances to win against LMQ rely on Meteos and Sneaky The Daily Dot Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Etienne Jack August 6 2013 How Zachary Sneaky Scuderi became a pro LoL player iBuyPower Cloud9 Archived from the original on July 7 2016 Retrieved January 9 2016 Gafford Travis June 29 2015 Sneaky to Fans We ll Get There We ll Go Back to Cloud9 GameSpot Interview Retrieved January 9 2016 a b Sneaky becomes an independent full time streamer will remain C9 owner and advisor Dot Esports January 15 2020 Retrieved January 17 2020 Behind the ID Zachary Sneaky Scuderi ESPN June 28 2016 Chang Brian August 29 2018 Sneaky s back to cosplaying but this time he s not alone Dot Esports Retrieved August 9 2021 Newell Adam June 22 2019 Sneaky returns to his cosplaying ways with a gorgeous Divine Sword Irelia makeover Dot Esports Retrieved August 9 2021 a b Scuderi Zach January 15 2020 Future plans pic twitter com Ll3eUaqZTW Sneaky Retrieved January 17 2020 Sneaky to stream full time after stepping back from League of Legends esports January 16 2020 Sneaky becomes independent full time streamer but will remain Cloud9 owner and advisor April 26 2023 Tyler Erzberger January 27 2020 LCS pros look back on Cloud9 AD carry Sneaky s legacy ESPN Retrieved February 7 2020 External links editSneaky on Twitter nbsp Sneaky on Instagram What is Sneaky s Legacy by LoLAthlete on YouTube published Apr 29 2023 As of this edit this article uses content from Sneaky which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL All relevant terms must be followed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sneaky gamer amp oldid 1184703582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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