Magic: The Gathering is nearly 30 years old, with a Pro Tour history dating back nearly as long. In that time, no players have ever finished in the Top 8 of three consecutive Pro Tour or World Championship events while winning at least two of them. Yet that is exactly what Nathan Steuer accomplished last weekend in Minneapolis, writing history in the process. After winning Magic World Championship XXVIII and making the Top 8 of Pro Tour Phyrexia, he claimed another trophy at Pro Tour March of the Machine.
🏆Congratulations to #PTMachine champion Nathan Steuer!🏆
— PlayMTG (@PlayMTG) May 7, 2023
Steuer's third Top 8 in back-to-back events and second win in eight months is unprecedented, and cements him as one of the best players in the world right now – if not THE best.
Congratulations again, Nathan!🎉 pic.twitter.com/C3ViGo5Brp
Prior to last weekend, three players had finished in the top eight of three consecutive Pro Tour or World Championship events: Scott Johns (Pro Tour Los Angeles 1996, Pro Tour Columbus 1996, Worlds 1996), Jon Finkel (Pro Tour New York 1998, Worlds 1998, Pro Tour Chicago 1998), and Luis Scott-Vargas (Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch, Pro Tour Shadows over Innistrad, Pro Tour Eldritch Moon, all held in 2016). However, none of them won at least two of those three events.
In addition, Kai Budde may have won Pro Tour Barcelona 2001, Pro Tour New York 2001, and Pro Tour New Orleans 2001, in a string of wins so preposterous that it literally made Eric Taylor eat his hat, but Budde failed to make Top 8 at Worlds 2001 in the middle of that year, breaking the streak of consecutive Top Finishes. Taking into account these historical facts, Nathan Steuer's current run truly is in a league of its own.
Steuer reached his well-deserved victory by excelling in both Limited and Standard. In today's article, however, I'll be taking a broader look at the win rates and standout decks from the Standard rounds only. By removing the draft portion and looking beyond the Top 8, we'll get a better sense of the biggest Standard lessons from the event overall. Let's run the numbers!
Standard Win Rates
The most popular Standard deck archetypes as per the Pro Tour metagame breakdown were Rakdos Midrange, Grixis Midrange, Esper Legends, and Rakdos Reanimator. In today's article, to highlight the performance of specific versions, I've changed the archetype of Team Handshake's Rakdos Midrange decks with
I then determined the non-mirror, non-draw, non-bye match record and win rate of every archetype at Pro Tour March of the Machine, using data from Standard Swiss rounds only. The results are provided in the following table, where each archetype name hyperlinks to a representative decklist.
Archetype | Number of Players | Record and Win Rate |
---|---|---|
Orzhov Midrange | 1 | 7-3 (70.0%) |
Rakdos "Burn" Midrange | 15 | 72-35 (67.3%) |
Azorius Soldiers | 5 | 33-17 (66.0%) |
Boros Midrange | 1 | 5-3 (62.5%) |
Selesnya Enchantments | 2 | 11-7 (61.1%) |
Orzhov Toxic | 1 | 3-2 (60.0%) |
Rakdos "Invoke" Reanimator | 8 | 35-25 (58.3%) |
Mardu Reanimator | 3 | 13-10 (56.5%) |
Rakdos "Stock" Midrange | 31 | 109-91 (54.5%) |
Grixis Midrange | 39 | 144-126 (53.3%) |
Rakdos Breach | 7 | 28-25 (52.8%) |
Mono-Red Aggro | 6 | 21-19 (52.5%) |
Domain Control | 12 | 51-47 (52.0%) |
Five-color Ramp | 9 | 32-31 (50.8%) |
Grixis Singularity | 6 | 22-22 (50.0%) |
Abzan Toxic | 1 | 5-5 (50.0%) |
Grixis Reanimator | 18 | 65-76 (46.1%) |
Mono-White Midrange | 9 | 26-31 (45.6%) |
Esper Legends | 30 | 80-109 (42.3%) |
Four-Color Legends | 2 | 8-11 (42.1%) |
Jeskai Control | 8 | 25-35 (41.7%) |
Rakdos "Stock" Reanimator | 16 | 46-65 (41.4%) |
Rakdos Aggro | 1 | 2-3 (40.0%) |
RataBlade Combo | 1 | 4-6 (40.0%) |
Selesnya Toxic | 3 | 8-13 (38.1%) |
Azorius Control | 4 | 9-15 (37.5%) |
Grixis Incubate | 3 | 6-11 (35.3%) |
Mono-Blue Tempo | 3 | 8-17 (32.0%) |
Abzan Legends | 1 | 1-3 (25.0%) |
Mono-Black Midrange | 1 | 1-3 (25.0%) |
Naya Counters | 1 | 1-3 (25.0%) |
Orzhov Phyrexians | 1 | 1-4 (20.0%) |
Dimir Midrange | 1 | 1-4 (20.0%) |
Selesnya Counters | 1 | 1-4 (20.0%) |
Dimir Toxic | 1 | 0-3 (0.0%) |
Of course, sample sizes were small: For example, the 95% confidence interval for Grixis Midrange's win rate ranged from 47.2% to 59.4%. This means that it's hard to draw strong conclusions, even for the most-played decks. Yet several facts are clear:
As a group, decks with
All decks with this black-red core included
To provide another useful reference, here are all decks with at least 7 Standard non-bye wins at Pro Tour March of the Machine, along with their combined non-bye Swiss and Top 8 record, in descending order of their win rate. Decks without the black-red core are shown in bold:
- Kenta Harane, 9-1, Grixis Reanimator
- Nathan Steuer, 11-2, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange (Winner)
- Willy Edel, 8-2, Rakdos Midrange
- Marco Del Pivo, 8-2, Grixis Midrange
- Abe Corrigan, 8-2, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Karl Sarap, 8-2, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Simon Nielsen, 8-2, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Adriano Moscato, 8-2, Grixis Midrange
- Javier Dominguez, 7-2, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Norbie Mendoza, 7-2-1, Grixis Midrange
- Bart van Etten, 7-2-1, Rakdos Midrange
- Cain Rianhard, 10-3, Rakdos "Invoke" Reanimator (Finalist)
- David Olsen, 9-3, Five-Color Ramp (Semifinalist)
- Jeff Pyka, 7-3, Jeskai Control
- James Arthur, 7-3, Mono-Red Aggro
- Aaren Beaty, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- Charalampos Kikidis, 7-3, Grixis Midrange
- Ian Birrell, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- Daniel Kristoff, 7-3, Selesnya Enchantments
- Alan Andrzejewski, 7-3, Rakdos Reanimator
- Brendon Johnson, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- Reid Duke, 7-3, Rakdos Breach
- Socrates Rozakeas, 7-3, Rakdos "Invoke" Reanimator
- Matti Kuisma, 7-3, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Marcio Carvalho, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- David Inglis, 7-3, Rakdos "Burn" Midrange
- Julian Jakobovits, 7-3, Grixis Singularity
- Daniel Goetschel, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- Cole Cunningham, 7-3, Rakdos Midrange
- Jordan Berkowitz, 7-3, Domain Control
- Yuta Takahashi, 7-3, Grixis Midrange
- Nico Bohny, 7-3, Domain Control
- Haruki Usui, 7-3, Azorius Soldiers
- Miguel Castro, 7-3, Rakdos Reanimator
- Rei Sato, 7-3, Azorius Soldiers
- Arne Huschenbeth, 7-3, Grixis Midrange
- Autumn Burchett, 8-4, Orzhov Midrange (Semifinalist)
- Yiwen Chen, 7-4, Azorius Solders
This list contains the decks that had the best Standard results at the Pro Tour. Let's take a closer look at the four decks that made it to the semifinals, followed by two standout decks that used neither black nor red.
The Standard Decks from the Four Semifinalists
This is the deck that clinched the trophy. Reigning World Champion Nathan Steuer has been on a historical run this season, and his record at Pro Tour March of the Machine was 4-1-1 in the draft rounds and 11-2 in the Standard rounds, including the Top 8.
I WON THE PRO TOUR! Incredible week with Team 🤝🤝🤝 followed up by an absolutely insane victory. #TeamUltimateGuard #TooFree
— Nathan Steuer (@Nathansteuer1) May 7, 2023
In a nutshell, his deck is a well-tuned version of Rakdos Midrange. Compared to the typical stock version, Steuer has fewer
While main deck
All fifteen members of Team Handshake (Karl Sarap, Simon Nielsen, Javier Dominguez, Austin Bursavich, Jonny Guttman, Daniel Brodie, Matti Kuisma, Abe Corrigan, Eli Loveman, Joonas Eloranta, David Inglis, Stefan Schütz, Tristan Wylde-LaRue, Anthony Lee, and Nathan Steuer himself) registered such a Rakdos "Burn" Midrange deck with one or two copies of
Their combined Standard win rate in the Swiss was an astounding 67.3%. When analyzing this number, it's impossible to disentangle excellence of the players and their decks, but Team Handshake dominated the event in historical fashion. After the Swiss rounds, Dominguez, Sarap, Nielsen, and Steuer had made Top 8 as first, second, third, and fourth seed respectively, and Steuer's tight technical play rewarded him with a well-deserved trophy.
Cain Rianhard, who qualified through the 2022 Magic Online Champions Showcase 3, took second place with Rakdos "Invoke" Reanimator. They went 4-2 in the draft rounds and 10-3 in the Standard rounds, including the Top 8.
Shout outs to team sewer rats & Sokos + @kanister_mtg especially for breaking standard. I wasn't able to prepare as much for this tournament as I wanted to with moving so the work everybody else did was of tremendous help, much love y'all ❤️
— Cain (@CainRianhard) May 7, 2023
Their build of Rakdos Reanimator eschews
In total, eight players (Piotr Głogowski, Alan Andrzejewski, Tomasz Sodomirski, Matias Leveratto, Damian Buckley, Tristan Leenders, Socrates Rozakeas, and Cain Rianhard) used such a Rakdos "Invoke" Reanimator deck at the Pro Tour, all from Team Sewer Rats. Their combined Standard win rate in the Swiss was a solid 58.3%.
Autumn Burchett, who qualified through a PTQ at MagicCon: Philadelphia, took third place with Orzhov Midrange. She went 5-1 in the draft rounds and 8-4 in the Standard rounds, including the Top 8.
I only went and Top 8’d a another Pro Tour!!!!
— Autumn Burchett (@autumnlilypad) May 7, 2023
Sooooo proud of myself
Obscura Storefront MVP
Burchett was the only player at the Pro Tour to use
While Mono-White Midrange faltered at the Pro Tour, Burchett's innovative black splash might revitalize the archetype. It's a breath of fresh air, and with a 6-3 record against
David Olsen, who qualified through the East Canada Regional Championship, took fourth place with Five-Color Ramp. He went 4-2 in the draft rounds and 9-3 in the Standard rounds, including the Top 8.
Scoreboard #PTMachine
— David Olsen (@Canadianbacn) May 7, 2023
The key ramp cards in the deck are
Olsen and a Canadian squad of teammates (William la Hay, Philippe Gareau, Markus Thibeau, Cameron Sweetnam, and Adham Momen) had streamlined the list, with Christian Trudel playing a similar build. Their combined Standard win rate in the Swiss, excluding the different Five-Color Ramp versions played by Federico del Basso and Christoph Schlom that did not perform as well, was 54.7%. In particular, the Canadians went 20-17 against decks with
Two Standout Standard Decks Without Black or Red
At Pro Tour March of the Machine, Azorius Soldiers had one of the best win rates out of all major archetypes. All lists eschewed
In Usui's list, all creatures other than
Despite the introduction of
Only two players registered Selesnya Enchantments for Pro Tour March of the Machine, but it posted a solid win rate overall, with Daniel Kristoff going 7-3 and Sam Bogue going 5-5. Bogue then played the Second Chance Pro Tour Qualifier for Pro Tour competitors on Sunday, where he was the only non-Rakdos player in the Top 8.
At the Pro Tour, Selesnya Enchantments went 6-6 against decks with
A novel inclusion in Kristoff's deck is
Conclusion
After a cycle of Regional Championships that was dominated by Rakdos Midrange, Esper Legends, and Mono-White Midrange, the red-black core conquered Pro Tour March of the Machine. Decks with
However, despite their inherent strength, they are not unbeatable, especially now that they have a clear target on their back. As I explained in this article, decks like Orzhov Midrange, Five-Color Ramp, Azorius Soldiers, and Selesnya Enchantments may have what it takes, and they might be able to dethrone the heavily played black-red decks. If you're a Standard player who likes to attack the established metagame, then these could prove to be good options.
The next Pro Tour, called Pro Tour The Lord of the Rings, will be held at MagicCon: Barcelona on July 28–30 and will feature the Modern format. It will be fed by the third cycle of Regional Championships, which runs from June 3 through July 2 in the Pioneer format. MagicCon: Barcelona will also feature another Secret Lair Showdown, which is a really cool event that is open to anyone, with exclusive versions of
Congratulations to the winner of the #MCMinneapolis Secret Lair Showdown, Richard! He battled it out throughout the weekend to emerge victorious with a new Brainstorm in hand.
— Magic: The Gathering (@wizards_magic) May 8, 2023
We'll see you at #MCBarcelona for the next Showdown. pic.twitter.com/kXAOgHmnlP
Although Richard was rightfully thrilled to win the coveted