Movistar KOI Dominates Team Vitality in LEC Game 2
Movistar KOI secures a commanding victory over Team Vitality in Game 2 of the LEC 2026 Spring Season. Read our full match breakdown and player stats.
El mercado favorecía a Team Vitality con 50% y ganó como se esperaba
Top players by damage
The LEC 2026 Spring Season continues to provide incredible storylines, and the recent clash between Team Vitality and Movistar KOI delivered a masterclass in clinical execution. While the series eventually went to a deciding third game, Game 2 was a definitive statement from Movistar KOI, as they dismantled Team Vitality in a 33-minute performance that showcased superior objective control and team fighting.
The Early Game: Pressure and Lane Management
The match began with a heavy emphasis on early-game skirmishing and jungle pathing. Team Vitality entered the game with a composition built around the high-impact playmaking of Wukong and Gnar, looking to use their frontline to create chaos. In the early minutes, the Vitality jungler managed to secure a significant lead, ending the 15-minute mark with a GoldDiff@15 of +448.
However, these early gold advantages in the jungle did not translate into map-wide pressure. Movistar KOI played a much more disciplined game, focusing on neutralizing the lanes. The Movistar KOI jungler, playing Vi, was instrumental in this effort. Despite facing a gold deficit in the jungle early on, the Vi player maintained an incredible KDA of 10.00 (4/0/6) and a 71% Kill Participation. This presence in the mid-game skirmishes allowed Movistar KOI to stabilize the map and prevent Team Vitality from snowballing their early leads.
Mid-Game: Objective Control and the Turning Point
As the game transitioned into the mid-game, the difference in objective priority became the deciding factor. Movistar KOI was relentless in their pursuit of neutral objectives, securing 4 dragons compared to Team Vitality's single dragon. This dragon stack provided the necessary sustain and buffs to weather the storms of Team Vitality's engage compositions.
The most critical moment of the match arrived when Movistar KOI secured the Baron Nashor. This objective allowed them to leverage their superior wave clear and siege potential. The Movistar KOI mid laner, playing Viktor, was a central figure in this period. With a KDA of 3.33 (5/3/5) and a 71% Kill Participation, the Viktor player provided the consistent area-of-effect damage needed to break down Team Vitality's defenses and secure the Baron pit.
The support role also played a massive part in this momentum. The Movistar KOI support, playing Seraphine, acted as the glue for the team, finishing with a 5.50 KDA (0/2/11) and an astounding 79% Kill Participation. This level of utility and vision control made it nearly impossible for Team Vitality to find any meaningful openings.
Closing the Game: The Final Push
With the Baron buff in hand and a significant gold lead of 66.6k to 58.7k, Movistar KOI began their final march toward the Team Vitality base. They utilized their 8 towers to create a suffocating map presence, leaving Team Vitality with only 4 towers to their name.
The bot lane was the final piece of the puzzle. The Movistar KOI ADC, playing Ashe, provided the much-needed utility and vision through arrows, finishing with a near-perfect KDA of 9.00 (2/0/7). This precision allowed the team to pick off stragglers and prevent any late-game miracles from the Vitality roster.
As the 33-minute mark approached, Team Vitality's composition simply ran out of steam. Unable to find the picks necessary to disrupt the Movistar KOI frontline, the Vitality Nexus fell, handing Movistar KOI a spectacular victory in Game 2. It was a game defined by precision, objective-driven macro, and the ability to turn early jungle leads into a late-game landslide.
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