While we've celebrated Championship winners and incredible digital playoffs, It's been years since the last "Pro Tour champion" was crowned. It's something Reid Duke and Benton Madsen were well aware of when they met at the final table here in Philadelphia–and what they had been battling to be all weekend.
After one more best-of-five match, the next Pro Tour champion would be one of them.
The two were familiar with each other: they had played in Round 4 of the swiss when Madsen's Selesnya Auras deck knocked off the Izzet Creativity combo deck that had carried Duke (and teammate Gabriel Nassif) to the Top 8. But familiarity with the Sunday stage could not be more different between the two. It was the first Top Finish of Madsen's career, while Duke was appearing in his seventh and seeking to add the one thing missing from his illustrious Hall of Fame career: "Pro Tour champion."
For Duke, in the finals seat, this was the best chance he's had–and the first since the return of the Pro Tour. He entered the finals with momentum; after losing the first two games of the quarterfinals and needing to rally for the reverse 3-0 sweep to stay alive, he won five of six games to surge into the title match.
Madsen, meanwhile, was still riding the high he had been all weekend–he was the final remaining undefeated player at the Pro Tour and had cruised through the first two rounds of the Top 8 to find his underdog run now with just one more challenge to overcome.
The Games
Madsen led off the finals exactly as he hoped, with a one-drop Duke was very familiar with at final tables:
That's easier said than done, and Madsen curved out game one in perhaps the most terrifying way possible:
Madsen came out of the gates blazing, but no one has ever accused a Bogles deck of topdecking well, and he struggled to find a way to break through Duke's defenses over the following turns. Despite the explosive start, he was now facing down a board that Duke was slowly gaining control of. Madsen was able to find Skrelv, Defector Mite–a key card for protecting his creatures from removal in most circumstances and absolutely vital in this game for allowing it to swing past Kiki-Jiki reflections.
But he'd first have to untap. And that's exactly what Duke didn't let him do. The Hall of Famer untapped for his turn and resolved his deck's namesake,
Duke had dropped his first two games of the Top 8, but had been on fire since–and in game two, he channeled that into a pair of
"Pro Tour champion" was now a game away.
The third game would be Madsen's last chance to get back into the match. And while he had to mulligan down several cards, he was able to find the all-important
It didn't work. This was Duke's day.
A second Fable arrived to provide another blocker, and when the Hall of Famer untapped, it was clear from his face he had everything he needed: an untapped land, an
Congratulations to Reid Duke, the champion of Pro Tour Phyrexia!