Following their victory at the
LEC Versus, it is time to take stock for
. As he does at the end of every split, the team’s General Manager,
Romain Bigeard, published on
his X account this Wednesday the complete record of G2’s scrim results between December 8 and February 28, just before the final.
As is often the case, the data offers some insight into G2’s practice dynamics and whether their official results aligned with their performances in training. Over the course of this LEC Versus period, G2 finished with a
64.37% scrim win rate—
slightly lower than during the 2025 Summer Split (68.1%), but still within the team’s usual standards.
MKOI as main opponents
As for their opponents, the list is unsurprisingly dominated by LEC teams. With the exception of
, every team participating in the competition scrimmed against G2 during this period. The only ERL teams to face G2 in practice were
,
, and G2’s own academy roster,
. These particular scrims took place in the week preceding the LEC final against
.
The opponent against whom the European champions played the highest number of scrim games was
. The two teams became frequent practice partners from January 30 onward, continuing through the final week of the LEC, during which they played a total of 43 games. With 29 victories, G2 nevertheless maintained a fairly clear advantage over the Spanish side. The two other teams that appeared most frequently were
, who managed to hold a 50% win rate across 32 games against G2, and
—the organization’s long-standing rival—who struggled somewhat more, recording 21 losses in 28 matches.
KC scrim terror
One particularly striking element in these results concerns G2’s record against the other LEC Versus finalist. Although all of their scrims against Karmine Corp took place before the start of the tournament, G2 posted a win rate of only 16% in that matchup, with four wins and 20 losses. This result aligns with rumors suggesting that Karmine Corp had been an exceptionally strong and difficult team to face in scrims.
And since preparation does not consist solely of scrims, Romain Bigeard also shared some details regarding the team’s internal approach to the season. “Starting the year without a new staff member or new player means no honeymoon effect, and you have to challenge how you keep working together. As part of this exercise, all 10 members of the team (5 players + 5 staff) had to go 1o1 dinner with each other, so a total of 9 dinners per person.” The scrim results were therefore accompanied by 45 selfies of players and staff taken during these dinners—because preparation, it seems, is always easier on a full stomach.