This is the best tournament there's been in a while.
Quick' n Toast
by Guillaume Wafo-Tapa
5th place at GP Copenhagen
4 Rune Snag
4 Cryptic Command
2 Pact of Negation
2 Condemn
2 Pyroclasm
2 Firespout
2 Slaughter Pact
3 Mulldrifter
3 Careful Consideration
2 Mystical Teachings
2 Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir
1 Cloudthresher
1 Oona, Queen of the Fae
1 Platinum Angel
1 Coalition Relic
4 Wall of Roots
1 Tolaria West
1 Urza's Factory
2 Dreadship Reef
1 Fungal Reaches
4 Mystic Gate
3 Yavimaya Coast
4 Reflecting Pool
4 Vivid Creek
4 Vivid Meadow
SB: 1 Pyroclasm
SB: 3 Runed Halo
SB: 2 Crovax, Ascendant Hero
SB: 1 Squall Line
SB: 2 Archon of Justice
SB: 2 Extirpate
SB: 1 Haunting Hymn
SB: 1 Imp's Mischief
SB: 1 Mind Shatter
SB: 1 Pact of Negation
This list is very advanced; it has no Kitchen Finks and no Runed Halo in the maindeck. Teferi and Mystical Teachings had already been seen from Olivier Ruel at French Nationals, but something no one else would have figured out is the 2/2/2/2 removal kit. Vivid Meadow instead of Grove is pretty cool; the deck has a lot more room to breathe without all those Cloudthreshers.
In the sideboard, Haunting Hymn over the second Mind Shatter is a nice bit of tech from block constructed. I can't figure out when Archon of Justice comes in, but Guillaume Wafo-Tapa knows a lot of things I don't.
round 4 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Nis Berthelsen (DNK)
round 5 - W, 2-1-0, vs. David Christensen (DNK)
round 6 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Peter Steinaa (DNK)
round 7 - L, 0-2-0, vs. David Larsson (SWE)
round 8 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Cyryl Kociecki (POL)
round 9 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Liking Saiyasely (FRA)
round 10 - W, 2-1-0, vs. Gabriel Nassif (FRA)
round 11 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Robin Lehmann (DEU)
round 12 - L, 1-2-0, vs. Oskar Sköld (SWE)
round 13 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Dominik Piatkowski (POL)
round 14 - W, 2-1-0, vs. Shuhei Nakamura (JPN)
round 15 - W, 2-0-0, vs. Tomoharu Saito (JPN)
quarterfinal - L, 0-2-0, vs. Shuhei Nakamura (JPN)
total matches: 10-3-0
total games: 21-9-0
Here are some games won/lost records for other top players in Copenhagen:
David Larsson: 27-9-0
Tomoharu Saito: 26-9-0
Shuhei Nakamura: 23-9-0
I hoped those statistics would prove that Wafo-Tapa was the best player in the tournament. But instead they just proved that he played fewer rounds than the other players.
In general, games won/lost seems like a really good statistic to measure a player's success in some detail. Maybe it would make for better tiebreaks than opponent win percentage?
Round 14 versus Shuhei Nakamura
covered by Daniel Ullenius
Guillaume misses a land drop turn four or five, but he has Wall of Roots and Condemn to handle the green creatures. He has counters for everything big, but Shuhei gets in some damage with Treetop Villages. Then Guillaume has Teferi into Oona and the game is over.
In game two Guillaume mulligans and his Wall of Roots gets Thoughtseized. He can't draw Firespount but he can draw three Cryptic Commands to get three Fog effects. Shuhei keeps playing threats and just wins the game.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiNNxoXpmzJfrugeZiaMrk4aKCHeswaIjCvz7pALE-l6eb0oe73UZleFciOdsh9NnRbfwNvLsAb0OaRTqySkvzLTjWutqo3r9aYgwl9z2d_rbSApOoNSI4r38TIw2wTg6802vUw8ugcFMiR/s320/wafo12.jpg)
In game three Guillaume opens on Coalition Relic; Shuhei has man-lands but not much early pressure. Shuhei has Garruk, Guillaume has Teferi, and then Shuhei resolves a big Profane Command to kill Teferi and get back a Tarmogoyf. Guillaume is drawing cards and gets three Wall of Roots, but he falls to six. Runed Halo on Treetop Village means Guillaume has enough blockers for now.
Guillaume starts chaining Mystical Teachings, getting down Teferi and a Cryptic Command to Fog. Shuhei keeps playing creatures. Guillaume falls to one but still has blockers; he gets Runed Halo on Tarmogoyf and tutors up Oona. When he activates and makes five tokens Shuhei scoops. Wafo-Tapa makes top eight at one life.
(We got to see some end step Careful Considerations in this match. I have not always known when to cast those.)
Quarterfinal versus Shuhei Nakamura
covered by Tim Willoughby
Shuhei dumps creatures and Guillaume builds mana. Eyeblight's Ending kills Wall of Roots to get a Colossus through, but on the next turn Guillaume has Condemn. Mutavault and Murderous Redcap get Guillaume to five; Firespout is not very effective. Guillaume keeps drawing cards but doesn't find a win.
In game two Guillaume is short on lands, Shuhei starts pointing removal at Wall of Roots, and Guillaume has to counter. Shuhei gets Bitterblossom and Guillaume draws cards to look for mana.
Guillaume gets his sixth mana for Oona, but he is already down to 4. Guillaume taps out to make blockers so Shuhei gets to Profane Command for the last four damage.
In the top 8 profiles, Wafo-Tapa says that his best card in the tournament was Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir. He also says that he doesn't care about sports much.
Here are the pro point standings after GP Copenhagen:
46 Shuuhei Nakamura
36 Olivier Ruel
31 Guillaume Wafo-tapa
31 Jan Ruess
31 Raphael Levy
30 Yong Han Choo
29 Mario Pascoli
29 Robert van Medevoort
28 Jon Finkel
28 Yuuta Takahashi
Wafo-Tapa is now tied for third with two other players. He will be in first place by ten points after he wins Pro Tour Berlin.
I've also found out that Wafo-Tapa writes articles for a French website called Lotus Noir. Unfortunately, their articles are only visible if you've paid thirty Euros for an account.
Since this is an entire blog about Guillaume Wafo-Tapa, I can only assume he reads it. Guillaume, if you are there, I have an offer -- switch over and start writing articles for the Wafo-Tapa Blog! We cannot pay you anything, but you would be able to reach millions of fans with your writing voice, instead of just a few paid subscribers.
If you are interested, my email address is verdant4ce@hotmail.com .