Like its star player Lee "
" Sang-hyeok, current
T1 CEO Joseph Patrick Marsh is reportedly set to remain in his position until 2029, according to a report from
INVEN. The South Korean outlet, citing minutes from the club’s board meeting held on April 3, stated that Joe Marsh’s term has been extended until March 30, 2029, securing him nearly three more years at the helm.
In office since October 2019, the American CEO took over the role following the merger between SK Telecom T1 and Comcast Spectacor, the parent company of the Philadelphia Fusion, back when the Overwatch League was considered the promised land of esports. Together, the two entities created T1 Entertainment & Sports, the organization as it exists today, with the board appointing Joe Marsh, previously vice president and Chief Financial Officer of the OWL franchise, as the head of the new structure.
Beyond the organization’s competitive success with three consecutive
League of Legends world titles, Joe Marsh has overseen
’s financial transformation, with 2025 standing out as a landmark year. Long operating at a loss, the organization still posted a net loss of around $5.85 million in 2024, but T1 reached a historic milestone in 2025 by recording its first operating profit, totaling $1.7 million, or roughly 2.5 billion KRW.
Strategies that are paying off
That success appears to have convinced the current board of the South Korean organization, which has now renewed its trust in the North American CEO. Alongside those achievements, T1 continues to capitalize on one of its biggest strengths: its massive fanbase, both in South Korea and across the globe. In 2026, the organization is set to host
two HOMEGROUND events, including one that has already taken place, bringing together tens of thousands of fans in one location to celebrate the club while offering large amounts of exclusive merchandise.
T1 COO Josh Woongki Ahn stated in an interview with South Korean outlet Chosun Money that the latest event “achieved quite good sales.” According to the COO, the event generated between 2 and 3 billion KRW (approximately $1.4 to $2 million) from ticket sales alone across the three-day event, excluding on-site merchandise sales and sponsorships. Successes in South Korea that the organization now hopes to expand internationally, as the club aims to “take ‘home games’ overseas. Our goal is to hold games at the Sphere in Las Vegas within a few years.”
Alongside these ambitions, T1 has also started its expansion strategy across Asia, with a second Base Camp in Seoul, but more importantly through Pop-Up Café tests held in Malaysia and Thailand last October, specifically in Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok. Likely a first step, especially considering that in late 2024, Joe Marsh told
Sports Business Journal that the organization was looking for funding to further develop this side of the business. Related or not, just a few months later, in September 2025, T1 Entertainment & Sports announced that it had raised nearly $100 million, potentially to accelerate the project and further fuel T1’s rapid growth.