AG.AL 2-0 Karmine Corp — Esports World Cup 2026 Results & Stats
AG.AL beat Karmine Corp 2-0 in Esports World Cup 2026. Full series recap: drafts, gold timelines, player stats and odds history.
TL;DR: AG.AL swept Karmine Corp 0-2 at EWC 2026, taking control of the series through a fast opener and a more patient second map. The result matters because AG.AL did not just win; they showed they could dictate pace in different ways and close a BO3 without ever letting KC reset the narrative.
AG.AL walked into this Esports World Cup 2026 meeting and left with a clean 0-2 over Karmine Corp, the kind of result that changes the tone around both teams immediately. More than the scoreline itself, what stood out was how AG.AL bent the series to two different tempos, first landing a sharp early blow, then turning the follow-up into a slower, suffocating finish.
Key Takeaways
- Series MVP: Caliste delivered the loudest individual number set of the match on Viktor, posting 7/1/8, a 15.0 KDA, and 27.8% of his team's damage in the opening map, the performance that most clearly defined how one side could seize total control of a game.
- The most decisive moment of the series came in Game 1, when the winning side stacked a 3 to 0 dragon lead and built an 8k gold advantage by 27:35; from there, the map no longer felt contested, only delayed.
- The final 0-2 was not built on identical wins: Game 1 ended with an 18-11 kill score in 27:35, while Game 2 closed at 12-4 in 37:53, showing a series that began with sharper trading and ended with near-complete denial.
Before the Series
Coming into the set, the intrigue was easy to understand. Karmine Corp is a name that carries weight with any League of Legends audience, and in a BO3 at EWC, that alone creates expectation. But a short series often comes down to who imposes the first identity: the team that gets the other side reacting usually owns the rest of the day.
That is exactly what happened here. AG.AL did not allow Karmine Corp to turn the match into a comfort draft, a slow scaling conversation, or a stage for a late comeback. Instead, the series became about control: of objectives, of tempo, and of emotional pressure.
Game 1 — Setting the Tone
The opener was where the series found its voice. The raw numbers tell you it was decisive: 18-11 in kills, 57.9k to 49.9k in gold, and a finish at 27:35. But for a listener, the better way to picture it is this: every time the map threatened to open up, one side got there first, hit harder, and left less room for a reply.
The clearest individual performance belonged to Caliste on Viktor. A 7/1/8 line in a game that fast is not just efficient; it is authoritative. Viktor became the backbone of every winning fight, the kind of carry presence that makes front-to-back teamfighting feel inevitable once the setup appears.
That setup came largely through Busio on Rell, who piled up 13 assists across 18 team kills. Those numbers matter because they point to how clean the engage timing was. When Rell starts the fight on the right beat, everyone else gets to look sharper. The map also opened through Yike on Naafiri, whose 4/3/9 scoreline reflected repeated jungle pressure that kept lanes connected instead of isolated.
The objective spread may have been the real turning point. A 3 to 0 dragon edge and an 8k gold snowball told Karmine Corp that there would be no cheap route back. Whether through draft execution, better rotations, or cleaner fight starts, the opening game made one thing obvious: AG.AL had found the rhythm first.
Game 2 — The Pivot
If Game 1 felt like a punch, Game 2 felt like a vice tightening. The kill total dropped to 12-4, but that lower-volatility script actually strengthened the sweep. It showed that AG.AL did not need chaos to win; they could also drag the game to 37:53 and make Karmine Corp play from a position of restraint.
That is the pivot that decided the series arc. After a loud first map, Karmine Corp needed the second game to reset pace, create side-lane pressure, and force AG.AL into mistakes. Instead, the opposite happened. The lower kill count suggests fewer openings, fewer successful skirmishes, and fewer moments where KC could snowball a lead of their own.
For casual fans, this is often how a 0-2 really lands. It is not only about one team losing twice. It is about losing in two different textures of League of Legends: first when the game is moving fast, then when it slows down and asks for patience. Once AG.AL proved they could win both versions, the sweep felt complete long before the nexus actually fell.
Aftermath
The headline will always be 0-2, and it should be. AG.AL left EWC 2026 with the cleaner story, the cleaner close, and the stronger read on the series. Karmine Corp, by contrast, now has to look back at a BO3 where they never fully regained control after the first map slipped away.
The biggest lesson from the set is that momentum in League of Legends is not just emotional. It becomes visible in dragons, gold, assist share, and how often the same engage pattern keeps working. Caliste, Busio, and Yike gave this series its most memorable stat lines, but the broader victory belonged to AG.AL's ability to keep the map on their terms from start to finish.
Series Stats
| Game | Winner | Duration | Kills | Series MVP Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AG.AL | 27:35 | 18-11 | Caliste — Viktor — 7/1/8 |
| 2 | AG.AL | 37:53 | 12-4 | AG.AL control game — 12-4 team kill closeout |
FAQ
Q: Why did AG.AL win this series so convincingly over Karmine Corp?
The biggest reason was control of pace. AG.AL won a faster opener with an 18-11 kill score and then slowed Game 2 down to a 12-4 finish at 37:53, proving they could dictate both styles.
Q: What was the turning point of the BO3?
Game 1's objective control was the defining swing: a 3 to 0 dragon advantage and an 8k gold lead created the blueprint for the whole series and forced Karmine Corp to chase from behind afterward.
In This Series