Fluxo W7M's Clinical Sweep: Dismantling FURIA 2-0 in CBLOL
Fluxo W7M shocks the CBLOL 2026 landscape, overcoming FURIA's early game stats to secure a dominant 2-0 victory in a masterclass of discipline and jungle precision.
El mercado favorecía a Fluxo W7M con 50% y ganó como se esperaba
The Statistical Goliath vs. The Hungry Underdog
Entering the CBLOL 2026 Season Split 1 showdown, the narrative felt written in stone. On one side of the Rift, FURIA arrived as a statistical juggernaut. The numbers were terrifying: an average early game gold differential of +3,32 6 and a roster form sitting at a staggering 70.0%. When you looked at the lanes, it seemed impossible to breathe. Their top laner, Guigo, was a fortress of stability, consistently maintaining a +267 gold advantage by the fifteen-minute mark, while their support, JoJo, was orchestrating a massive +285 gold lead for his team.
The pre-match models were adamant, handing FURIA a 55% win probability. The expectation was a suffocating, lane-dominant masterclass that would leave Fluxo W7M gasping for air. Fluxo W7M, conversely, were viewed as a team struggling with a devastating early game score of just 1.8/10 kills. It was the classic tale of the unstoppable force meeting the immovable object, but as the series would prove, even the most imposing statistics can crumble when faced with a perfectly executed counter-strategy.
Game 1 — Breaking the Blueprint
The atmosphere in the arena for Game 1 was heavy with the weight of expectation. As the drafts were revealed, FURIA appeared to have the upper hand, leaning into a high-impact, heavy-hitting composition featuring Ambessa and java IV. The strategy was clear: use that overwhelming jungle presence to snowball the lanes and crush the opposition before they could even settle in.
However, the moment the Nexus exploded at the 31:05 mark, the fans realized they hadn't witnessed a domination, but a dismantling. Fluxo W7M played with a level of discipline that simply refused to acknowledge FURIA's power. Instead of the expected massacre, the jungle became a chaotic battleground where the underdogs thrived. While the gold gap remained tight in the opening minutes, Fluxo W7M began chipping away at the structure, eventually securing 7 towers to dismantle the visitors' momentum.
The scoreboard told the story of a clinical execution: an 18-6 kill advantage for Fluxo W7M. By neutralizing the initial aggression of Ambessa and Jarvan IV, Fluxo W7M didn't just survive the storm; they redirected it, taking a commanding 1-0 lead and leaving the favorites searching for answers.
Game 2 — The Clinical Execution
With the series on the line, FURIA entered Game 2 with their backs against the wall. The stakes were absolute: win or face a devastating series defeat. The pre-match models even shifted slightly, giving the red side a 60% win probability, banking on a draft centered around the poke and lane dominance of Corki and Nami. It was a blueprint designed to starve the enemy of resources, but Fluxo W7M had other plans.
What followed was not a comeback, but a total collapse of the FURIA identity. The mid-lane, which was supposed to be a pillar of stability, turned into a disaster zone. The Fluxo W7M mid-laner, playing a hyper-aggressive Yone, absolutely tore through the opposition. By the fifteen-minute mark, he had carved out a massive +2,386 gold advantage, effectively rendering the enemy Viktor a spectator in his own lane.
The jungle was equally decisive. The Fluxo W7M Wukong played with predatory precision, securing a +675 gold lead over the enemy jungler and ensuring that FURIA could never find the footing needed to stage a counter-attack. As the game reached its conclusion at 29:50, the score stood at a lopsided 14-9 in favor of Fluxo W7M. The red side's plan to poke and scale was utterly erased by the sheer mechanical pressure and gold superiority of the blue side.
Aftermath: A New Power Emerges
The final result—a 2-0 sweep for Fluxo W7M—sent shockwaves through the CBLOL. The team that was predicted to struggle in the early game proved that discipline and mid-game precision can render even the most dominant early-game stats irrelevant.
The MVP of this series was undoubtedly the Fluxo W7M mid-laner. His performance on Yone in Game 2 was nothing short of legendary, turning a potential deficit into a massive gold lead that broke the spirit of the FURIA roster. While FURIA's Guigo and JoJo remained formidable, they were simply outplayed by a team that knew exactly how to turn their opponents' aggression against them. For Fluxo W7M, this isn't just a victory; it is a statement to the entire 2026 season that the hierarchy of the CBLOL has just been rewritten.
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