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{{Short description|Professional esports organization founded by Taiwanese singer Jay Chou}}
{{Short description|Taiwanese esports organization}}
{{For|the 2021 American musical film|The J Team}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{More citations needed|date=June 2019}}
{{More citations needed|date=June 2019}}
{{Update|date=November 2024}}
}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{Infobox sports team
{{Infobox sports team
| name = J Team
| name = J Team
| short_name =
| short_name = JT
| logo = J Team logo.png
| logo = J Team logo.png
| logo_size =
| logo_size =
Line 11: Line 15:
| location =
| location =
| parent_group = JY Entertainment
| parent_group = JY Entertainment
| founded = 19 April 2016
| founded = {{start date|2016|4|19|df=yes}}
| folded =
| folded =
| league = [[Pacific Championship Series]]
| league =
| history = Taipei Assassins (2012–2016)<br />J Team (2016–present)
| history =
| city = [[Taipei]]
| city = [[Taipei]]
| owner = [[Jay Chou]]
| owner = [[Jay Chou]]
Line 20: Line 24:
| main_sponsor = [[CTBC Bank]]
| main_sponsor = [[CTBC Bank]]
| sport_label = Divisions
| sport_label = Divisions
| sport =
| sport = ''[[League of Legends]]''<br />''[[Arena of Valor]]''<br />''[[Hearthstone]]''
| website = {{URL|http://www.jy-ents.com/}}
| website = {{URL|http://www.jy-ents.com/}}
| footnotes =
| footnotes =
| fanclub =
| fanclub =
| module =
}}
{{Infobox Chinese
{{Infobox Chinese
| t = (台北) J戰隊
| child = yes
| p = (Táiběi) J Zhànduì
| t = (台北)J戰隊
| l = (Taipei) J Team
| p = (Táiběi) J Zhànduì
| altname = Former name
| l = (Taipei) J Team }}
| t2 = 台北暗殺星
| p2 = Táiběi Ànshāxīng
| l2 = Taipei Assassins
}}
}}


'''J Team''' is a [[Taiwan]]ese professional [[esports]] organization owned by JY Entertainment with players competing in ''[[League of Legends]]'' and [[StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty|''StarCraft II'']]. Their ''League of Legends'' team participates in the [[Pacific Championship Series]], the highest level of professional ''League of Legends'' in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and Southeast Asia. J Team was founded in April 2016 by [[Jay Chou]] after he purchased the LMS spot of the ''League of Legends'' team '''Taipei Assassins''' ('''TPA''') from [[Garena]], which had won the [[League of Legends: Season 2 World Championship|Season 2 World Championship]] in 2012.<ref>[https://pvplive.net/c/j-gaming-tarnishes-the-memory-of-taipei-assassin "J Team Tarnishes the Memory of Taipei Assassins"].</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.techinasia.com/taiwanese-megastar-jay-chou-bought-league-legends-team|title= Why Taiwanese megastar Jay Chou just bought a League of Legends team|author= C. Custer|date= 20 April 2016|access-date= 22 April 2016|work=[[Tech In Asia]]}}</ref>
'''J Team''' is a Taiwanese [[esports]] organization owned by JY Entertainment. It was founded in April 2016 by [[Jay Chou]] after he purchased the [[League of Legends Master Series|''League of Legends'' Master Series]] spot of [[Taipei Assassins]], which had won the [[League of Legends: Season 2 World Championship|Season 2 World Championship]] in 2012.

J Team's ''League of Legends'' team competed in the [[League of Legends Master Series|''League of Legends'' Master Series]] and later the [[Pacific Championship Series]]. J Team disbanded its ''League of Legends'' division in 2024 after failing to secure a spot in the [[League of Legends Championship Pacific|''League of Legends'' Championship Pacific]].


== ''League of Legends'' ==
== ''League of Legends'' ==
Taiwanese singer [[Jay Chou]] announced on 19 April 2016 that he had acquired the LMS spot of Taipei Assassins for his new esports organization, J Team.<ref>{{cite news |title=《英雄聯盟》周杰倫成立「英雄聯盟」職業戰隊,MRJ戰隊神奇登場! |url=http://gaming.com.tw/news_detail.php?n=3702 |access-date=26 May 2019 |work=gaming.com.tw |date=28 November 2015 |language=zh-tw}}</ref><ref>[https://pvplive.net/c/j-gaming-tarnishes-the-memory-of-taipei-assassin "J Team Tarnishes the Memory of Taipei Assassins"].</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.techinasia.com/taiwanese-megastar-jay-chou-bought-league-legends-team|title= Why Taiwanese megastar Jay Chou just bought a League of Legends team|author= C. Custer|date= 20 April 2016|access-date= 22 April 2016|work=[[Tech In Asia]]}}</ref> J Team debuted in the 2016 LMS Summer Split with an inaugural roster consisting of top laners Chen "Morning" Kuan-ting and Chen "RLun" Cheng-lun, jungler Chen "REFRA1N" Kuan-ting, mid laner Chu "FoFo" Chun-lan, bot laner Chang "BeBe" Bo-wei, and support Li "Jay" Chieh. The team placed first in the regular season with a 10–4–0 record but lost 0–3 to the [[Flash Wolves]] in the finals. J Team's second-place finish in playoffs qualified them for the 2016 LMS Regional Qualifiers and a chance at participating in the [[2016 League of Legends World Championship|2016 World Championship]]; however, they were defeated 2–3 in the semifinals by [[Machi Esports]]. J Team placed fifth/sixth at IEM Season 11 Gyeonggi after losing to North America's [[Immortals (esports)|Immortals]], with Chen "Achie" Chen-chi replacing REFRA1N in the jungle.
{{Split section|Taipei Assassins|discuss=Talk:J Team#Undoing the previous merger with Taipei Assassins|date=July 2020}}

=== Origins as For The Win ===
Support player "MiSTakE" met top laner "Stanley" while playing in the ''League of Legends'' ranked solo queue ladder. Shortly after connecting, their mutual friend "colalin" introduced them to "NeXAbc" and former [[Counter Logic Gaming]] player "Lilballz". Together with mid laner "A8000", they formed their team, For The Win (FTW), with MiSTakE as team captain.

FTW's first event was Garena's G1 esports competition. At the tournament, FTW took first place ahead of 150 other teams to qualify for the 2011 [[World Cyber Games]].<ref>{{cite news |title=G1大賽結束 「FTW」代表台灣出征 WCG - 新聞 《英雄聯盟 LoL》官方網站 |url=https://lol.garena.tw/news/298 |access-date=2 December 2020 |work=LoL Esports TW |language=zh-TW}}</ref> At the 2011 World Cyber Games, FTW could not make it through the group stage as they finished third in their group with a 2–2 record. FTW defeated Team Jantelaget and Orange eSports and lost to NaJin e-mFire and Millenium. Mid laner A8000 left the team after the event.

Despite being eliminated early on in the 2011 World Cyber Games, video game developer [[Garena]] took notice of the team's strong performance and offered to become the team's official sponsor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ggchronicle.com/teams-of-the-year-2012-taipei-assassins-and-moscow-five/|title=Teams of the Year 2012 – Taipei Assassins and Moscow Five|author=Obscurica|website=ggchronicle.com|date=8 January 2013|access-date=28 April 2015}}</ref> On 9 March 2012, Garena acquired FTW's roster and rebranded them as the Taipei Assassins.<ref name=":0">{{Citation|title=Taipei Assassins Crowned League of Legends Champions - IGN|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2012/10/16/taipei-assassins-champions-of-the-world|language=en|access-date=2020-10-28}}</ref>

=== As Taipei Assassins ===
{{Infobox sports team
| name = Taipei Assassins
| short_name = TPA
| logo = Taipei Assassins logo.png
| logo_size =
| alt =
| caption =
| location =
| parent_group =
| founded = {{start date|df=yes|2012|03|09}}
| folded =
| league = [[League of Legends Master Series|''League of Legends'' Master Series]]
| arena = Garena E-Sports Stadium
| championships = [[Season 2 World Championship]] (2012)
| city = Taipei
| colors = Red and black
| owner = Liu "Retty" Chia-Chu
| manager =
| partners = [[Azubu]]
| broadcasters = [[Garena]], [[Twitch (service)|Twitch]]
| sport_label =
| sport = ''[[League of Legends]]''
| website = {{URL|taipeiassassins.tw}}{{dead link|date=March 2019}}
| footnotes =
| fanclub =
}}

==== 2012 ====
[[File:Taipei Assassins at LoL World Championship 2012.jpg|thumb|Taipei Assassins at the Season 2 World Championship]]

Approximately one month after their official sponsorship began with Garena, Taipei Assassins underwent several roster changes. The team first welcomed AD carry "bebeisadog" and mid laner [[Toyz (gamer)|"Toyz"]]. Support player colalin and mid laner NeXAbc then moved to substitute positions. Team captain MiSTakE also transitioned from AD carry to support.

On 15 July 2012, Taipei Assassins took first place at the IGN ProLeague Season 5 Taiwanese Qualifiers. In the group stage, Taipei Assassins finished first, going 3–0 by defeating AllLaneCarry, TimeToTerminate, and HaNa. In the offline playoffs of the qualifiers, Taipei Assassins went undefeated, taking out WhyTrollMe 2–0 in the semifinals and Corsair 2–0 in the grand finals to take first place.

Taipei Assassins competed in the Season Two Regionals in Taipei. In the Round of 32 group stage, Taipei Assassins took first place in their group, going 3–0 by defeating 301{{lang|zh-hant|英雄聯盟}}, TeamMarlboroClassicS, and TheCradleOfVictory. Advancing to the Round-of-8 group stage, Taipei Assassins once again went undefeated, going 3–0 and taking first in their group, defeating AllLaneCarry, {{lang|zh-hant|皮卡丘打毛線}}, and TheoryOfEvolution. In the playoffs, Taipei Assassins took out MksZ 2–0 in the semifinals and then played a show match with the visiting CLG EU, which they lost. The Assassins continued their streak and defeated Corsair 2–0 in the grand finals, qualifying for the [[Season 2 World Championship]] in Los Angeles.

Taipei Assassins participated in the Season 2 World Championship held from 4 to 13 October 2012 in Los Angeles. Of the five regional champions, four teams, including TPA, were given a free pass out of the group stage based on a random drawing. In the quarterfinals, TPA faced off against the Korean team NaJin Sword. Despite being underdogs after NaJin Sword's strong group stage showing, the Assassins were able to come out with a victory, winning both games dominantly.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/10/06/taipei-assassins-shock-the-world-in-a-2-0-win-against-najin-sword|title=Taipei Assassins Shock the World in a 2-0 Win Against NaJin Sword|first=Steven |last=Yang|website=[[IGN]]|date=6 October 2012|access-date=28 April 2015}}</ref> They advanced to the semifinals against heavy tournament favorites Moscow Five. Alex Ich's Evelynn play caught TPA off guard in the first contest and put Moscow Five one game up in the series, but TPA rallied and took the next two games to win, earning a spot in the grand finals opposite [[Azubu Frost]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pcgamer.com/the-journeys-of-azubu-frost-and-taipei-assassins-to-tomorrows-1-million-championship-series/|title=Azubu Frost and Taipei Assassins play for $1 million tomorrow - here's how they got there|first=Josh |last=Augustine|date=12 October 2012|access-date=28 April 2015}}</ref> The Assassins once again dropped the first game in the set, but Frost folded under TPA's stellar coordination and relentless pressure throughout the next three games.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/10/16/taipei-assassins-champions-of-the-world|title=Taipei Assassins Crowned League Of Legends Champions|author=Lightblind|website=[[IGN]]|date=16 October 2015|access-date=12 November 2015}}</ref> TPA beat the Korean squad three games to one, securing the championship title and taking home the one million dollar grand prize.<ref name="second dynasty">{{cite web|url=http://na.lolesports.com/articles/taipei-assassins-second-dynasty|title=Taipei Assassins: Second Dynasty|website=LoL Esports|first=James ''Obscurica'' |last=Chen|date=21 August 2014|access-date=28 April 2015}}</ref><ref name=":0" /> Riot later released a set of TPA-themed skins for each of the champions they played in Game Four of the Finals.<ref>{{Cite web|title=League of Legends|url=https://lol.garena.com/news/sales--tpa-return-commemorative-skins|access-date=2020-10-28|website=lol.garena.com}}</ref>

Shortly after the conclusion of Season 2, TPA announced the addition of two more players onto their roster. "Zonda" was brought in as a substitute for top lane while GoDJJ joined as a second AD player; the changes suggested the formation of a second squad under the organization in the near future.<ref name="ZondaAndGodJJjoin">[http://lol.garena.tw/competitive/news/news_info.php?nid=745 TPA 見面會 新成員現身 本日活動系列報導 (Taiwanese)] ''lol.garena.tw''</ref>

Taipei Assassins attended the 2012 GPL Season 1 playoffs on 17 November in Singapore. They were seeded directly into the finals of the three-team tournament, being the number one seed holding a 38–2 record throughout the regular season. The Singapore Sentinels managed to defeat Saigon Jokers in the semi-finals, setting the stage for a showdown between the two strongest teams in the GPL. TPA managed to take the first two games without much trouble, with Stanley constantly split pushing and outmaneuvering the opposition. SGS pulled out an interesting shield strategy in Game 3, with "Chawy" on "Karma" in mid lane. The strategy caught TPA off guard, and SGS managed to end the game in a rout of the Taiwanese squad. The Sentinels attempted a similar strategy in Game 4, again acquiring a large advantage early game. However, Toyz turned the tide of the game with a spot-on Orianna ultimate during a close Dragon fight, which decimated SGS and their chances at the title. In the end, Taipei Assassins secured 1st place at the event, going 3–1 and taking home the championship ring.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Benedetti |first1=Winda |title=Taipei Assassins triumph in 'League of Legends' world finals |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/taipei-assassins-triumph-league-legends-world-finals-flna1C6448579 |access-date=3 August 2020 |work=NBC News |date=13 October 2012 |language=en}}</ref>

On 29 November and 2 December, the Assassins competed in IPL 5 in Las Vegas. During the group stages, TPA defeated Thai hopefuls Blackbean, giving "BeBe" one of the three pentakills in the tournament. Later TPA went against Moscow 5 in a rematch of the Season 2 World Championship semi-finals. Stanley on Rengar ran rampant on the Russian squad, advancing the Assassins 2–0 into the playoffs. TPA faced a massive upset in Round 2 against FnaticRC, falling 0–2 into the losers bracket. There the Taiwanese team would sweep two series against the Singapore Sentinels and Curse Gaming. Coming into Round 4, the Assassins faced CLG EU. The Europeans won a fast-paced opener and held a clear advantage throughout most of the second game. However, after Bebe finished his core build on Caitlyn, TPA managed to take a team fight and the game. In the third game, the Assassins again prevailed in a long drawn out game, eliminating CLG EU from the IPL 5. TPA then defeated M5 2–0, making it their fifth consecutive win against the Russian team. In the semifinals TPA was once again outmaneuvered and overrun by FnaticRC, falling 0–2. Taipei Assassins took 3rd place at the event with $7,500 in winnings.

==== 2013 ====
After winning 2012's GPL, TPA was invited to the 2013 Spring and Summer split of the GPL. On 10 January, TPA was invited to participate in the GIGABYTE StarsWar League Season 2. TPA had a good performance in the group stage, going 3–1–1, winning against Positive Energy, LGD Gaming, and Royal Club Huang Zu, while tying against Najin Sword and losing to MVP Ozone. However, they showed a disappointing 2–0 loss against Chinese powerhouse Team WE, and a surprising loss to amateur team Positive Energy, especially after their 2–0 victory against them in the group stage. This unfortunate outcome was directly linked by many people to Lilballz's inability to adapt to the Season 3 jungle meta. TPA eventually finished the Spring Split of the GPL 27–1, losing only 1 game to SGS, which people again linked directly to Lilballz.

On 18 May, TPA was invited to play in the NVIDIA Game Festival 2013. As a result of TPA losing 1–0 to Royal Club Huang Zu, TPA decided to start tryouts for new positions for their jungler (to replace Lilballz), although the decision was somewhat indecisive. TPA would, however, pull out a surprising 2–1 victory against OMG, one of the strongest Chinese teams, showing that TPA was still a strong team, despite a recent slump. This eventually led to the decision that Lilballz was to be replaced by their new jungler Sarsky. Since IPL 5, TPA was in the doldrums. Therefore, the team desired to win tournaments, so much pressure was made and led to the team playing under a bad atmosphere.

After TPA showing some bad results against teams in the 2013 GPL Summer, Garena announced that Stanley was released from TPA and Toyz retired from competitive ''League of Legends'' on 30 June 2013. At the same time, Jay and Achie join TPA to solve the roster vacancy.<ref name="gosugamers">{{cite web|url=http://www.gosugamers.net/lol/news/24670-toyz-and-stanley-leave-taipei-assassins|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130703112102/http://www.gosugamers.net/lol/news/24670-toyz-and-stanley-leave-taipei-assassins|archive-date=3 July 2013|url-status=dead|title=LoL News: Toyz and Stanley leave Taipei Assassins &#124; GosuGamers|access-date=29 April 2015}}</ref>

TPA lost the chance to go to the Season 3 World Championship after they lost 0–2 vs. Gamania Bears in the lower bracket of the S3 Taipei Qualifiers. They ended their bad season 3 with a loss against ahq in the 2013 GPL Championship.

==== 2014 ====
In the beginning of Season 4, TPA acquired "Morning" from Wayi Spider as the new mid laner; while "BeBe" switched back to AD Carry and "DinTer" became the substitute. On 11 October, Lilballz got a ban from Garena since he is caught from elo-boosting and retired right after the ban is active.
From November 2013 to January 2014, TPA competed in the 2014 GPL Winter. They finished the group stage with 8 wins and 2 losses. They managed to beat Full Louis (3–0), Saigon Jokers (3–2), and Taipei Snipers (3–2) in the knock out stages and became the champion of the tournament. During the time of 2014 GPL Winter, TPA also took part in [[IEM Season VIII - Singapore]], but lost to Saigon Jokers and got the 5th/6th place along with Singapore Sentinels.

Right after the 2014 GPL Winter, "Sarsky" left TPA. DinTer became the starting jungler and the team played in 2014 GPL Spring. They won all their matches in the group stage. In the knock out stages, TPA defeated Insidious Gaming (3–0), Taipei Snipers (3–2), and ahq (3–2) to become the champion of the tournament once again. TPA was also invited to [[IEM Season VIII - World Championship]] but got only the 5th/6th place along with Invictus Gaming.

TPA then acquired Winds from Taipei Snipers as the new jungler. They came to All-Star Paris 2014 as Taiwan & SEA representative but they got a bad tournament with 4 losses against Cloud 9, Fnatic, SK Telecom T1 K, and OMG. Before the 2014 GPL Summer started, TPA acquired Chawy from Singapore Sentinels as the substitute mid laner. They finished the group stage with 9 wins and 1 loss. TPA then managed to win against Insidious Gaming Rebirth (3–0); Saigon Fantastic Five (3–1); and ahq (3–0) to become the champion of the tournament the third time, getting the #1 seed of Taiwan & SEA Region in the [[League of Legends World Championship#2014 season|World Championship 2014]].

=== As J Team ===
Taiwanese celebrity [[Jay Chou]] announced on 19 April 2016 that he had acquired the LMS spot and roster of Taipei Assassins for his new esports organization, J Team.<ref>{{cite news |title=《英雄聯盟》周杰倫成立「英雄聯盟」職業戰隊,MRJ戰隊神奇登場! |url=http://gaming.com.tw/news_detail.php?n=3702 |access-date=26 May 2019 |work=gaming.com.tw |date=28 November 2015 |language=zh-tw}}</ref> J Team debuted in the 2016 LMS Summer Split with an inaugural roster consisting of top laners Chen "Morning" Kuan-ting and Chen "RLun" Cheng-lun, jungler Chen "REFRA1N" Kuan-ting, mid laner Chu "FoFo" Chun-lan, bot laner Chang "BeBe" Bo-wei, and support Li "Jay" Chieh. The team placed first in the regular season with a 10–4–0 record but lost 0–3 to the [[Flash Wolves]] in the finals. J Team's second-place finish in playoffs qualified them for the 2016 LMS Regional Qualifiers and a chance at participating in the [[2016 League of Legends World Championship|2016 World Championship]]; however, they were defeated 2–3 in the semifinals by [[Machi Esports]]. J Team placed fifth/sixth at IEM Season 11 Gyeonggi after losing to North America's [[Immortals (esports)|Immortals]], with Chen "Achie" Chen-chi replacing REFRA1N in the jungle.


In the 2017 LMS Spring Split J Team placed third in both the regular season and playoffs, losing in the second round of the latter to [[ahq eSports Club]]. J Team was one of four teams that represented the LMS at Rift Rivals 2017, where the league placed last. J Team placed fourth in both the regular season and playoffs of the 2017 LMS Summer Split after losing to ahq once again in the playoffs. Top laner Morning was replaced by Hsu "Rest" Shih-chieh during the playoffs. J Team was unable to qualify for the [[2017 League of Legends World Championship|2017 World Championship]] after losing to [[Hong Kong Attitude]] in the regional finals.
In the 2017 LMS Spring Split J Team placed third in both the regular season and playoffs, losing in the second round of the latter to [[ahq eSports Club]]. J Team was one of four teams that represented the LMS at Rift Rivals 2017, where the league placed last. J Team placed fourth in both the regular season and playoffs of the 2017 LMS Summer Split after losing to ahq once again in the playoffs. Top laner Morning was replaced by Hsu "Rest" Shih-chieh during the playoffs. J Team was unable to qualify for the [[2017 League of Legends World Championship|2017 World Championship]] after losing to [[Hong Kong Attitude]] in the regional finals.


J Team placed fifth in the 2018 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in the 2018 LMS Summer regular season, both times with 6–8 records. After losing 0–3 to [[MAD Team]] in the 2018 LMS Summer playoffs, J Team finished 3rd and prepared for the upcoming regional finals. J Team was once again unsuccessful in qualifying for the World Championship after being swept 0–3 by [[G-Rex]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Torres |first1=Xander |title=G-Rex Qualifies for the 2018 World Championship |url=https://www.vpesports.com/leagueoflegends/g-rex-qualifies-for-the-2018-world-championship/ |access-date=31 March 2019 |work=VPEsports |date=22 September 2018}}</ref>
J Team placed fifth in the 2018 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in the 2018 LMS Summer regular season, both times with 6–8 records. After losing 0–3 to [[MAD Team]] in the 2018 LMS Summer playoffs, J Team finished 3rd and prepared for the upcoming regional finals. J Team was once again unsuccessful in qualifying for the World Championship after being swept 0–3 by [[G-Rex]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Torres |first1=Xander |title=G-Rex Qualifies for the 2018 World Championship |url=https://www.vpesports.com/leagueoflegends/g-rex-qualifies-for-the-2018-world-championship/ |access-date=31 March 2019 |work=VPEsports |date=22 September 2018 }}{{Dead link|date=September 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>


J Team placed third in the 2019 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in playoffs after losing 1–3 to ahq. In the 2019 LMS Summer Split, J Team finished first in both the regular season and playoffs, defeating ahq 3–1 in the finals and securing their first LMS title under the J Team name. This also qualified J Team for the [[2019 League of Legends World Championship|2019 World Championship]] as the LMS' first seed.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Newell |first1=Adam |title=All the Teams Qualified for 2019 Worlds: League of Legends |url=https://dotesports.com/league-of-legends/news/qualified-teams-2019-lol-worlds |access-date=13 September 2019 |work=Dot Esports |date=9 September 2019}}</ref>
J Team placed third in the 2019 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in playoffs after losing 1–3 to ahq. In the 2019 LMS Summer Split, J Team finished first in both the regular season and playoffs, defeating ahq 3–1 in the finals and securing their first LMS title under the J Team name. This also qualified J Team for the [[2019 League of Legends World Championship|2019 World Championship]] as the LMS' first seed where they ultimately ranked 9th.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Newell |first1=Adam |title=All the Teams Qualified for 2019 Worlds: League of Legends |url=https://dotesports.com/league-of-legends/news/qualified-teams-2019-lol-worlds |access-date=13 September 2019 |work=Dot Esports |date=9 September 2019}}</ref>

==== Current roster ====
{{LoL roster header
| team = J Team
| game = League of Legends
| role = yes
| bg1 = #E4007F
| color1 = #FFFFFF
| bg2 = #000000
| color2 = #FFFFFF
}}
<!-- list of players -->
{{LoL player | handle = Rest | name = Hsu Shih-chieh | role = Top | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Hana | name = Chen Chih-hao | role = Jungle | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Mission | name = Chen Hsiao-hsien | role = Mid | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Nestea | name = Hsu Bao-yuan | role = Mid | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Lilv | name = Chen Chin-han | role = Bot | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Woody | name = Lin Hung-yu | role = Support | nat = TW}}
{{LoL player | handle = Driver | name = Shen Zong-hua | role = Top | nat = TW | sub = yes}}
{{LoL player | handle = Lauva | name = Huang Hsin-yu | role = Jungle | nat = TW | sub = yes}}
{{LoL player | handle = Nestea | name = Hsu Bao-yuan | role = Support | nat = TW | sub = yes}}
<!-- end of list players -->
{{LoL roster footer
| head_coach = Fu "Wei" Chien-wei
| asst_coach = Yu "Coldicee" Min-hsiang
| otherlegend =
| roster_url = https://lol.gamepedia.≈com/J_Team
| accessdate = 14 February 2021
}}


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{Official website}}
* {{Official website}}


{{S-start}}
{{Jay Chou}}
{{S-ach}}
{{Succession box
| title = [[League of Legends World Championship|''League of Legends'' World Championship]] winner
| years = 2012
| with =
| before = [[Fnatic]]
| after = [[SK Telecom T1]]
}}
{{Succession box
| title = [[Garena Premier League]] winner
| years = Season 1 2012 – Spring 2013<br />Winter 2014 – Summer 2014
| with =
| before = New championship<br />[[ahq e-Sports Club]]
| after = [[ahq e-Sports Club]]<br />Saigon Fantastic Five
}}
{{S-end}}

{{Pacific Championship Series}}
{{Pacific Championship Series}}
{{Sports teams in Taipei}}
{{CCBYSASource|sourcepath=http://lol.gamepedia.com/Taipei_Assassins|sourcearticle=Taipei Assassins}}


[[Category:2016 establishments in Taiwan]]
[[Category:2016 establishments in Taiwan]]
[[Category:Esports teams based in Taiwan]]
[[Category:Esports teams based in Taiwan]]
[[Category:Esports teams established in 2016]]
[[Category:Esports teams established in 2016]]
[[Category:League of Legends Master Series teams]]
[[Category:Former League of Legends Master Series teams]]
[[Category:Pacific Championship Series teams]]
[[Category:Pacific Championship Series teams]]
[[Category:StarCraft II teams]]
[[Category:StarCraft teams]]
[[Category:Jay Chou]]

Latest revision as of 18:20, 21 November 2024

J Team
Short nameJT
Founded19 April 2016 (2016-04-19)
Based inTaipei
OwnerJay Chou
Main sponsorCTBC Bank
Parent groupJY Entertainment
Websitewww.jy-ents.com
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese(台北)J戰隊
Literal meaning(Taipei) J Team
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin(Táiběi) J Zhànduì

J Team is a Taiwanese esports organization owned by JY Entertainment. It was founded in April 2016 by Jay Chou after he purchased the League of Legends Master Series spot of Taipei Assassins, which had won the Season 2 World Championship in 2012.

J Team's League of Legends team competed in the League of Legends Master Series and later the Pacific Championship Series. J Team disbanded its League of Legends division in 2024 after failing to secure a spot in the League of Legends Championship Pacific.

League of Legends

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Taiwanese singer Jay Chou announced on 19 April 2016 that he had acquired the LMS spot of Taipei Assassins for his new esports organization, J Team.[1][2][3] J Team debuted in the 2016 LMS Summer Split with an inaugural roster consisting of top laners Chen "Morning" Kuan-ting and Chen "RLun" Cheng-lun, jungler Chen "REFRA1N" Kuan-ting, mid laner Chu "FoFo" Chun-lan, bot laner Chang "BeBe" Bo-wei, and support Li "Jay" Chieh. The team placed first in the regular season with a 10–4–0 record but lost 0–3 to the Flash Wolves in the finals. J Team's second-place finish in playoffs qualified them for the 2016 LMS Regional Qualifiers and a chance at participating in the 2016 World Championship; however, they were defeated 2–3 in the semifinals by Machi Esports. J Team placed fifth/sixth at IEM Season 11 Gyeonggi after losing to North America's Immortals, with Chen "Achie" Chen-chi replacing REFRA1N in the jungle.

In the 2017 LMS Spring Split J Team placed third in both the regular season and playoffs, losing in the second round of the latter to ahq eSports Club. J Team was one of four teams that represented the LMS at Rift Rivals 2017, where the league placed last. J Team placed fourth in both the regular season and playoffs of the 2017 LMS Summer Split after losing to ahq once again in the playoffs. Top laner Morning was replaced by Hsu "Rest" Shih-chieh during the playoffs. J Team was unable to qualify for the 2017 World Championship after losing to Hong Kong Attitude in the regional finals.

J Team placed fifth in the 2018 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in the 2018 LMS Summer regular season, both times with 6–8 records. After losing 0–3 to MAD Team in the 2018 LMS Summer playoffs, J Team finished 3rd and prepared for the upcoming regional finals. J Team was once again unsuccessful in qualifying for the World Championship after being swept 0–3 by G-Rex.[4]

J Team placed third in the 2019 LMS Spring regular season and fourth in playoffs after losing 1–3 to ahq. In the 2019 LMS Summer Split, J Team finished first in both the regular season and playoffs, defeating ahq 3–1 in the finals and securing their first LMS title under the J Team name. This also qualified J Team for the 2019 World Championship as the LMS' first seed where they ultimately ranked 9th.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "《英雄聯盟》周杰倫成立「英雄聯盟」職業戰隊,MRJ戰隊神奇登場!". gaming.com.tw (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 28 November 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  2. ^ "J Team Tarnishes the Memory of Taipei Assassins".
  3. ^ C. Custer (20 April 2016). "Why Taiwanese megastar Jay Chou just bought a League of Legends team". Tech In Asia. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  4. ^ Torres, Xander (22 September 2018). "G-Rex Qualifies for the 2018 World Championship". VPEsports. Retrieved 31 March 2019.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Newell, Adam (9 September 2019). "All the Teams Qualified for 2019 Worlds: League of Legends". Dot Esports. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
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