My SCG Con Experience was Crazy

Hello everyone! Previously I had an article go up here on Cardsphere where I talked about my preparation for SCG Con and the SCG Invitational. For those of you that didn't read that article and are unsure of what I'm talking about, think of SCG Con as a Magic Fest and the SCG Invitational as the main tournament at a Magic Fest. In comparison to a Magic Fest where the Grand Prix main event is open to anyone who pays an entry fee, the SCG Invitational is an invite-only tournament where you have to earn your spot to play in the tournament. So for today's article, I'm going to talk about my experience and how I went from being down on myself and questioning myself as a player to drafting for $10,000 in prizes!
Day 1
Technically, the convention itself started on Thursday, but we didn't have to be there until Friday, so we'll start with Friday as Day 1 . Which begins with us arriving at our hotel room at about 2:30 in the morning. It was a 6 hour drive and we couldn't leave for Virginia until everyone in the car were done with work.
In the car were Brandon Dempsey, who has won an SCG Standard Classic event and got 13th at the SCG Standard Open in Worcester earlier this year, Joe Fortini who has 4 SCG Classic top 8 finishes and a 13th place finish at the SCG Standard Open in Philadelphia in 2015, Matt Tumavitch who has 4 SCG Open top 8 finishes and 1 SCG Open win from the SCG Standard Open in Philadelphia in 2015, and me, Marc Yeager. A mediocre Magic: the Gathering content creator attending his first large SCG event.
The Invitational is set up to be 4 rounds of Pioneer and 4 rounds of Modern on day 1. After 8 rounds, anyone with a record of 5-3 or better moves onto day 2 where you play another 4 rounds of Pioneer and 4 rounds of Modern. The top 8 records after 16 rounds play on day 3 to determine a champion. We begin with 4 rounds of Pioneer. Here was my decklist for the event:
4 Aether Hub
4 All That Glitters
1 Battlefield Forge
4 Bomat Courier
4 Darksteel Citadel
4 Ensoul Artifact
4 Gingerbrute
1 Hallowed Fountain
2 Hangarback Walker
2 Hope of Ghirapur
1 Island
4 Ornithopter
1 Shivan Reef
3 Shrapnel Blast
2 Skilled Animator
4 Smuggler's Copter
4 Spire of Industry
3 Spirebluff Canal
1 Steam Vents
4 Steel Overseer
3 Stubborn Denial
1 Aethersphere Harvester
3 Encase in Ice
2 Hangarback Walker
1 Lava Coil
3 Magma Spray
2 Pithing Needle
1 Spell Pierce
2 Wear/Tear
I like the premise of the deck. I think it's strong and it has treated me well online. All That Glitters
Round 1 vs Izzet Phoenix Loss 0-2 Record 0-1
Unfortunately, there isn't too much to talk about in my first match of the day. I mulliganed to 5 both games and my opponent played well. His name was Allen Steinberg and he finished the main event in 21st, so it sounds like he played well all weekend and not just against me! The only play during this match that had any relevance worth talking about was that in game 1 I had the option to Shrapnel Blast
Round 2 vs Mono Green Loss 0-2 Record 0-2
2 rounds played, 0 games won. I don't hate the Mono Green matchup as long as they don't have Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx
Round 3 vs Mono Green Win 2-0 Record 1-2
We did it. We won a game. Not just 1 game either. 2 of them! My opponent had Elvish Mystic
Round 4 vs Simic Loss 0-2 Record 1-3
My opponent's deck this round was basically Mono green again except he was splashing blue for Hydroid Krasis
At this point in the day, I'm 1-3 and have only won 2 games through 4 rounds. I was feeling really deflated and was questioning myself. I earned my invite to get here, but now that I was finally here at my 1st SCG event, I'm getting absolutely demolished. I felt like I was letting everyone down. That means everyone that was supporting me on social media and wishing me good luck, my friends who were all proud of me just for qualifying, the guys at Cardsphere who are paying me to represent them at the event, and myself. Sure, it's only 4 rounds into 1 tournament of many, but with this being my biggest tournament ever, I felt pretty bad at the time.
After a short break, it was time to play 4 rounds of Modern. If I manage to 4-0 the Modern portion of the event, then I can still technically make day 2 with a 5-3 record. I qualified for the Invitational by winning a tournament with Modern Infect. Luckily for me, infect is positioned really well in the meta right now and I know how to play it well. This made it an easy deck selection for me. Here is the list I played.
1 Become Immense
4 Blighted Agent
4 Blossoming Defense
2 Breeding Pool
1 Dismember
3 Distortion Strike
4 Glistener Elf
1 Ichorclaw Myr
4 Inkmoth Nexus
4 Might of Old Krosa
1 Misty Rainforest
4 Mutagenic Growth
4 Noble Hierarch
2 Pendelhaven
4 Scale Up
3 Snow-CoveRed Forest
2 Spell Pierce
4 Vines of Vastwood
2 Waterlogged Grove
4 Windswept Heath
2 Wooded Foothills
1 Dismember
3 Grafdigger's Cage
1 Piracy Charm
2 Pithing Needle
3 Return to Nature
1 Spell Pierce
2 Spellskite
2 Wild Defiance
The deck is great. Enough said. I really can't advocate for this deck anymore than I already do. There are 2 cards that a lot of people have been playing recently that I don't have in my list that I'd like to touch on briefly. Once Upon A Time
Round 5 vs Tron Win 2-0 Record 2-3
Tron is one of the easiest matchups for infect. They lack interaction and sometimes are just dead before they even have Tron assembled. I'll gladly take my free win. At the time, I needed it.
Round 6 vs Grixis Shadow Win 2-0 Record 3-3
I'm still amazed that I won 2-0 here. Grixis Shadow one of infect's worst matchups. If I could pick 3 decks to never have to play against with Infect, they'd be Jund, Burn, and Grixis shadow. I played really well this round and brought back some of that self confidence that had been lost during the Pioneer rounds. In game 1, I was very patient and held up double protection for my creatures every turn until I had the win. Game 2 was significantly different. One of the best cards that Infect usually plays against Death's Shadow
Round 7 vs Tron Loss 0-2 Record 3-4
I deserve this. It only makes sense that if I 2-0 my worst matchup that my best match up then gets to 2-0 me in return. In game 1, I win if I'm on the play, but lose because I'm on the draw. He has turn 3 Tron and gets to exile my Glistener Elf
Now that it is mathematically impossible to make day 2, I drop from the event and call it a day.
Day 2
I woke up and headed over to the convention center for a Cube Qualifier that began at 10. Star City Games was doing a cube draft that would be streamed after the Invitational was over. There were 8 qualifier events and the 8 winners all got to compete in that streamed cube draft. The 8 players would then play for $10,000 in prizes with $4k going to 1st, $2k going to 2nd, $1k going to 3rd and 4th, and $500 going to 5th-8th. There were 5 qualifiers that were cube draft from the new curated pauper cube the SCG is selling and 3 qualifiers that were Modern. The way that the tournament schedule was set up, once the 4 rounds of the qualifier were over, I could go play in a Pioneer Pro Tour Qualifier right afterwards. So, now that I have my day planned out, it's time to play some Magic.
The Cube Qualifier event that I played in was Modern, so I ran the same 75 that I played yesterday in the Invitational.
Round 1 vs Tron Win 2-0 Record 1-0
My opponent had to take quite a few mulligans in a matchup that was already pretty bad for him. A nice little 2-0 win was a solid way to start the tournament.
Round 2 vs Amulet Titan Win 2-1 Record 2-0
This was a fun match. Game 1 was close, but my opponent was on the play and I was on the draw. We both would have won the game on the same turn, so my opponent wins since he's on the play. Game 2 went pretty nicely for me. Countering Amulet of Vigor
The game goes on for another 2 or 3 turns and we end up in the position where my opponent has 3 lands and I have Glistener Elf
Round 3 vs Dredge Win 2-0 Record 3-0
I won game 1 by baiting my opponent into making a play that heavily favoRed me. I created a situation that enticed my opponent into casting his Conflagrate
Round 4 vs Amulet Titan Draw 0-3-0 Record 3-1-0
This was the final round of the swiss portion. The tournament structure was set up so that if it reached the 256 player cap, then the 8 remaining 4-0 players would be the top 8 and would enter the single elimination rounds. However, since the tournament didn't Reach the player cap, my opponent and I were able to intentionally draw with each other to ensure that both of us made the top 8. Also, in case you didn't know, when you intentionally draw in a tournament, instead of going into the system as each player winning 1 game or both players drawing 1 game, it goes in as both players drawing 3 games, which is why I wrote 0-3-0 above. I'm sure there's some mathematical reason for this with how it would effect tiebreakers, but I don't know what that mathematical reason is. Also, that PTQ that I thought I was playing in today was no longer on my mind at this point. I got my money back for the PTQ entry and decided I was just going to win this instead. Of course, that's infinitely easier said than done.
The top 8 decks for the tournament in order by seed were: Simic Whirza, Bant Snowblade, Infect, Amulet Titan, Simic Whirza, dredge, UW Stoneblade, and Eldrazi Tron.
Quarterfinals vs dredge Win 2-0
For my quarterfinals match, I played against the same dredge player that I had played against in round 3. In game 1, my opponent was on a mull to 5, but I put him out of misery quickly. Game 1 ended on turn 2. Game 2 things went a little slower. Since I had played against this opponent earlier, I had information regarding how he sideboards in this matchup. At one point during the previous game 2, I had looked at my opponent's graveyard and I wrote down relevant cards when I thought there was a possibility that we would be going to game 3.
So, I knew there were at least 2 copies of Lightning Axe
Semifinals vs Bant Snowblade Win 2-1
My opponent this round was Lucas Molho. I didn't know who he was before this tournament, but he was the best opponent I played all weekend up to this point. He played great and all the small nuances of his play seemed really well done. He gave himself the greatest possible chance to win the game in every scenario with no slip-ups. Game recognize game. This guy is a great Magic player. All 3 of our games were insanely close. This matchup has a lot of play to it because he has a lot of great cards against me. Ice-Fang Coatl
This felt like a clear foreshadowing for how many tournament was about to end. My opponent correctly took the control role and only ever tapped out 1 turn in the game. It was turn 1 so that he could play a Noble Hierarch
When I have opening hands like this, I like to play the games slower and leverage the protection spells. I have played a ton of games with decks that are generally considered as aggressive strategies like infect, Burn, Mono red prowess, Merfolk, etc. I have also watched a ton of gameplay from these kind of decks and one thing that I've found from the true experts of these strategies is that the best players are able to adjust and still win games on turn 10 or 15. Game 2 went back and forth a lot where both of us were being patient and making minimal game actions. He wanted to have the interaction ready for my creatures and I wanted to have the interaction ready for his interaction. One of the key things that happened in this game was my opponent having a Stoneforge Mystic
He played a Teferi, Time Raveler
Finals vs 4 Color Whirza Win 2-0
I won. I actually did it. Let's go over how I did it. So, the first thing to point out is the results of the the other semifinals match. It was Amulet Titan vs 4 Color Whirza. I like my matchup against Whirza better, but if Amulet Titan won, I'd get to be on the play. So, there was upside and downside to either of these players winning. The 4 Color Whirza player won in 3 games and it was time for the finals. My opponent was on a mulligan to 5 in game 1, but still managed to have the turn 2 Oko, Thief of Crowns
He turned my Glistener Elf
The good news for me is that my opponent really isn't doing much, so I'm not under any kind of pressure. He was drawing cards like Mox Opal
So, now I'm qualified to cube draft on the Star City Games livestream for $10k in prizes. Even as I'm writing this now, it all still just feels so surreal for me. From questioning everything I knew about myself as a competitive Magic player on Friday to being one of only 8 people that get the opportunity to draft cube for a shot at $10k in prizes. It was an insane turnaround.
Day 3
Not much happened earlier in the day leading up to the cube draft. I watched my friends put up good results of their own. Brandon Dempsey Top 8ed a cube qualifier and Matt Tumavitch Top 4ed the Pioneer PTQ with a Temur Midrange deck that he sleeved up earlier that morning. A few more cube qualifiers were going on and so was the Top 8 of the invitational, so there was plenty of great Magic to watch. I did a Throne of Eldraine side event draft, but that went horribly. The guy next to me opened a foil Questing Beast
Now, let's get to the fun part: the cube draft. Before we could draft, we got our pictures taken by a professional photographer. That was a surreal experience in itself.

I'm certainly not photogenic in the slightest, but look at that Cardsphere merch!
They also took a group picture of the 8 qualified participants.

From left to right we have:
Ryan Leek, Me (@AlbyMtG), Johnathan Brostoff (@jbrostoff), Anderson LeClair (@leclairandyMtG), Baker Neenan (@VTCLA1), Michael Boland, Noah Strasler (@NoahStrasler), and Zac Hill (@zdch)
The list for the cube can be found here: http://old.starcitygames.com/articles/38993_Cubing-For-Dollars-The-10K-Cube-Draft-And-Players-Cube-Qualifiers.html
In terms of preparation for the cube draft, I would say that I was moderately prepared. I had the time to go over the archetypes and to look at what key cube cards were missing from this cube specifically. For example, this cube had no Ponder
One thing that most of my opponents did have on me was general cube knowledge. Johnathan Brostoff and Zac Hill for example are literally know for being cube aficionados. Zac was a guest on a live panel earlier in the convention that was all about cube and Johnathan Brostoff has written articles about cube on some major websites and has been a trophy leader for more cube MtGO cube drafts than any other player in the world. My cube experience is drafting vintage cube a handful of times for FNM and playing 2, maybe 3, cube drafts on MtGO every few months.
The featured drafter for SCG's livestream was Zac Hill and I was passing to Zac during the draft. So, if you want to watch that and judge me for passing specific cards to him, feel free! The vod is up on SCG's YouTube channel right now. I've already gotten a few comments and questions about why I passed Oko, Thief of Crowns
The answer is pretty simple. My pack 1 pick 1 was Ancestral Recall
Pack 1 was pretty mediocre for me. I ended up with some powerful cards like Ancestral Recall
Pack 2 is where my deck really started to form itself. I picked up Mox Sapphire
Pack 3 Pick 1 was pretty unfortunate for me. The pack had 1 White card in it and it was a mediocre one in Tithe Taker
The way my deck turned out, I ended up very aggressive with 6 one-drop creatures and an average non-land converted mana cost of just under 1.85. That's also counting Force of Virtue
The structure for play was a single-elimination bracket. So, if I lose one match, I'm out.
My opponent in the quarterfinals was Baker Nennan. I knew who Baker was because he runs a Twitter account where he posts about a lot about decklists and his successful finishes in high-level MtGO events. We had no information about what anyone else was playing going into round 1, but here is what Baker's deck looked like.

His deck was one of my favorite cube archetypes, blue green Opposition
In game 1, I was on the draw and we had a pretty close match. I drew a lot of my aggressive one drops and was pushing through damage pretty easily. Unfortunately for me, Baker drew into a Batterskull
Also, I know we all have that friend that always blames their losses on the opponent hitting the right card at the right time or their opponent just doing something too good that no one could ever beat it. We all know someone like that. I promise you, I am not that person. Here was Baker's tweet after our match:

When your opponent acknowledges that they got lucky and then did something that was basically unbeatable, that's when you can feel free to tell your peers that you lost because your opponent was lucky and then did something unbeatable!
Losing in the quarterfinals was definitely disappointing and felt really bad at first, but now that I've had time to fully process the events of that weekend, I'm somewhat proud of it. I have been playing Magic for a lot less time than the vast majority of the players in that convention center and I had never even been to an SCG Open, but here I was managing to walk away with $500 in prizes from an event that a few hundRed talented players also tried to qualify for. The invitational didn't go my way, but that's just how some days of Magic go. I was able to shake it off quickly and come back the next day to put up the proudest moment of my competitive MtG career so far.
Before I wrap up this article, I have a few fun facts about my overall SCG Con experience that you might enjoy.
- I was on the draw for game 1 in 13 out of the 15 matches that I played at SCG Con. Everyone knows how important being on the play vs being on the draw can be in Magic, so putting up such a solid result despite my bad luck makes this achievement feel even sweeter than it would have if I had been on the play for 13 of my 15 matches.
- Both times I was on the play happened against Daniel Will. Round I had gone 9 rounds straight being on the draw before finally winning a die roll against Daniel in round 3 of the Cube Qualifier tournament and I had the better seeding while playing him in the top 8 of that event, so I was able to choose to be on the play.
- One of the members of the MtG Underground team recognized my Cardsphere shirt and hat while I was at the convention center. It was cool getting to talk to another Cardsphere user while I was there. If you don't know MtG Underground, check the top 5 senders by value on the Cardsphere homepage and you can find them there the majority of the time.
- The hotel room we stayed in was the worst hotel room I've ever stayed in. It was super cheap and we learned quickly why it was that way. One of our beds was broken, our TV didn't work, there were people yelling at all hours of the day and you could hear everything they were saying, there were stains of various colors all over the bed sheets, one of my friends forgot his room key and they gave him a room key without asking for any identification or anything else to prove that he wasn't just a random stranger asking for a door key to room X, and we called a pizza place to have it delivered to our room on the last night and they wouldn't delver to the hotel's address because they've had too many problems in the past with their delivery drivers getting harassed and robbed. Needless to say, our group has decided to spend the extra money to not stay at this place again if we all qualify for the next Invitational.
This concludes both my SCG Con experience and this article. I would like to thank everyone that was following along the whole time with my round result posts on Twitter and the love, support, and congratulations messages that I received over the course of that weekend. It was a surreal experience and I'm glad I was able to represent the Cardsphere team and got them some camera time on the Star City Games livestream while I was there. If you made it to the end of this article, you are a true champion as this article is nearly 8,000 words and I truly appreciate you taking the time out of your day to read my writing.
Thank you.