Ben Coleman Interview Guillaume Wafo-Tapa during round three
[Around 14:00 of Episode II]
BC: I've caught up with Guillaume Wafo-Tapa. How are you today, and how is your sealed deck?
GWT: I'm fine. Thank you. My sealed is pretty good, I think. I have two bombs -- the angel, 5/5 flier, vigilance, persist, and Incremental Blight.
BC: Yeah, both very very strong. Black/white, I've seen a few people go for that colour combination. Is it strong generally or is it strong generally, or is it just the way your pool turned out?
GWT: It's just the way my sealed is. My good cards are white and black. It's the best way I can maximize the pool I have, so it's just a coincidence.
BC: Okay. Have you had much practice building sealed pools for Shadowmoor? Is it something you think is quite straight-forward as a set?
GWT: I've only done two previews, so two sealeds, and I think it's not too difficult if you -- you just have to realize you can play hybrid cards with only one colour. Then it's just a sealed deck.
BC: Yeah. So straight-forward, then.
GWT: Yeah. I would say that.
BC: Okay. What about the format as -- how does it play out, once the deck's put together? Is it a quick format, are we looking for lots of really swift games, or is it a much slower format?
GWT: I think it's much slower. So it's probably better to draw first, and maybe play eighteen lands.
BC: Okay. What makes you think that about the format? What is it about Shadowmoor that makes you think, yeah, this is kind of slow.
GWT: I'm not sure. This is ...
BC: Just more of a general feeling from the set.
GWT: Yeah, a general feeling. The creatures cost more, the good ones. But it's just a feeling. I have not done much sealed deck, so ...
BC: Excellent, excellent. Obviously you had an exceptionally good year last year. In today's Grand Prix are you looking to repeat last year's success? Obviously everyone wants to win it, but what are you hoping for? What are you expecting to get out of the weekend?
GWT: I just hope to get pro points. Two would be great.
BC: Okay. But top eight a possibly, and fingers crossed. You are known, obviously, as a more constructed specialist. I was talking to Manuel Bucher earlier who said he's going to be testing with you for Pro Tour Hollywood, coming up. Have you got something in the pipeline for that? Have you looked at Shadowmoor standard at all?
GWT: I've looked. But I've not found something yet that I like, so we'll see.
BC: Knowing you it's likely to be blue and slow. Are there any cards in Shadowmoor that have popped out at you, anything where you thought, ooh, that's quite interesting?
GWT: I would say Plumeveil.
BC: The 4/4 flash flying wall.
GWT: Yeah. I like it.
BC: Nice surprise in limited and constructed. What about the combo decks that have been floating around on the Internet, the Swans of Bryn Argoll deck with Seismic Assault, or the Enchanted Evening / Patrician's Scorn? Either of those tempted you at all?
GWT: No. I think both are really bad -- but maybe I'm wrong. I have not tested yet. But it looked bad, in my opinion, because you -- in this format there are Faeries and Merfolk, two blue aggressive decks that play countermagic. So it seems hard to have a combo deck like those.
BC: Okay, excellent. Good luck this weekend, and hopefully we'll talk to you tomorrow. Thank you.
GWT: Thank you.
Rich Hagon interview Guillaume Wafo-Tapa after round ten
[from 30:00 of The 39 Steps]
RH: It's a very good Sunday morning to Guillaume Wafo-Tapa of France. Guillaume, tell us about your day yesterday.
GWT: It was good. I opened a good Sealed deck with two bombs.
RH: What were they?
GWT: The angel -- 5/5 flier --
RH: Twilight Shepherd.
GWT: Yeah. And the black removal -- the uncommon. Six counters: three, two, and one.
RH: Yeah, Incremental Blight.
GWT: Yeah. It's incredible.
RH: It's how you teach people about three-for-ones.
GWT: Yeah, that's it.
RH: So 5 and 1 there, for yesterday. Who did you lose to?
GWT: I lost to Davy Loeb.
RH: Of Poland?
GWT: Yeah.
RH: So you're starting to get a little good at this limited thing, aren't you? Really, it's like Kuala Lumpur, top eight, only Jonny Magic takes you out there. Here we are, another limited GP, on we go. You're kind of the all-around -- right up there. Are we looking at player of the year this year?
GWT: Oh. I'll try. We'll see.
RH: Alright. Now I understand that you've been testing with Remy Fortier a little for Hollywood so far, but no big answers yet?
GWT: No. I have nothing yet.
RH: Well, there's still two weeks.
GWT: Three.
RH: Oh, of course, three weeks. Two weeks before we all go out there and then start probably testing. And then of course, four weeks from now, you'll be attempting to win Grand Prix Birmingham, presumably.
GWT: Sure.
RH: How difficult is it, truthfully, how hard is it, to deal with two different constructed formats back-to-back?
GWT: The Pro Tour is much more important than the GP, and the GP is after the Pro Tour, so we're not doing any testing for the GP before the Pro Tour.
RH: So you fly home, and then you play Magic for three days, and then you come with a deck.
GWT: Exactly.
RH: Tell us about the draft today, then. What have you drafted?
GWT: I drafted red/green. The draft didn't go very well for me. I have a lot of little creatures. I would have preferred to play mono-red, but I just didn't have enough red cards, so I'm red/green. I have just two removals and the Runes of the Deus.
RH: On the plus side, though, playing red and green means that Runes of the Deus, which you've got two of, is just incredible.
GWT: Yeah, but it's just as good in mono-red.
RH: It's the double strike that's key.
GWT: Yeah, but with red/green hybrid creatures -- you can cast them if you play mono-red.
RH: So it's the same benefit, yeah.
GWT: So I'm not too happy, but I won my first round, so I hope I can make 2-1 with this.
RH: There was a nice little trick there that didn't cost you the game, but going in -- at the end there -- it's good to know that you can learn even at the highest levels of the game. You're going in with your two Runes of the Deus 4/4 that's a 5/5 if you have a green creature. And he blocks your other green creature, puts first strike damage on, kills your other green creature. That loses the +1/+1 bonus and you get to deal 5, rather than the six that would have killed him. You get to kill him next turn anyway, but it's just another little thing that you storage away for another time, like, "Hmm... Yeah, I must make sure my green guy doesn't die if I need it not to."
GWT: Yeah, I made a lot of mistakes yesterday, too.
RH: But that's the way that the best are the best. When bad players make mistakes they just lose, and when average players make mistakes, most of the time they lose. And when good players make mistakes, sometimes they get away with it.
GWT: Yeah, maybe.
RH: It's something that Gab Nassif frequently talks about when he talks to us on the show. He says, you know, no one plays Magic properly -- nobody plays it actually perfectly. So, you know, it is a game of error.
GWT: Yeah, that's true.
RH: And this one didn't cost you, so that's fantastic. 9 and 1, many congratulations. Now, coming into the weekend, were you just looking for a money finish, or did you just have your sights on, for example, a top eight berth.
GWT: No, I was hoping just to score some pro points, and I'm in day two, so --
RH: We're on the way.
GWT: Yeah, we're on the way.
RH: Okay, many thanks, Guillaume.
GWT: Thank you.
Wafo-Tapa's second draft
[from Twenty-Four Boosters]
to his left: blue/black
to his right: Gaetan Lefevbre in lots of colours
1-1 Wicker Warcrawler over River's Grasp and Sickle Ripper
1-2 Tower Above over Scuttlemutt
1-3 Grief Tyrant
1-4 Scar
1-5 Crabapple Cohort
1-6 Sootwalkers
1-7 Gleeful Sabotage
1-8 Mystic Gate
1-9 Manamorphose
1-10 Wooded Bastion
1-11 Rattlblaze Scarecrow
1-12 Crimson Wisps
1-13 Inescapable Brute
1-14 Blistering Dieflyn
2-1 Jaws of Stone over Burn Trail
2-2 Cultbrand Cinder over nothing
2-3 Murderous Redcap over Burn Trail
2-4 Farhaven Elf
2-5 Farhaven Elf
2-6 Gloomlance
2-7 Raven's Run Dragoon
2-8 Foxfire Oak
2-9 Loamdragger Giant
2-10 Cinderhaze Wretch
2-11 Presence of Gond
3-1 Biting Tether over Crabapple Cohort
3-2 Power of Fire
3-3 Farhaven Elf over Heartmender
3-4 Crabapple Cohort
3-5 Wildslayer Elves
3-6 Foxfire Oak
3-11 Pili-Pala
Wafo-Tapa's mana curve in his deck
1 mana - nothing
2 mana - Pili-Pala
3 mana - 3 Farhaven Elf
"Talking to him off-camera, as it were, he was saying that he felt possibly that the format wasn't that slow, and although it wasn't lightning quick, he didn't really feel that you had games where there were lot of creatures on the board. He felt that the format was relatively creature-light, in terms of sticking around on the table, turning sideways and so on. But the deck that he's got there is absolutely about, 'Please don't run me over, Mr. Turn Two / Turn Three Here's My [inaudible] Turn Four and Five. Let's game to some kind of late game.' And it's not even like he's got fliers at the top end or evasion. It's just, 'Here's a 5/5, here's a 7/6, here's another 5/5. What are you doing?'
- Rich Hagon
Ben Coleman's Summary of Wafo-Tapa vs. Nassif (round 13)
[still from Twenty Four Boosters]
Wafo-Tapa mulligans.
Nassif gets Briarberry Cohort.
Wafo-Tapa gets Pili-Pala.
Nassif gets Gravegill Duo and attacks.
Wafo-Tapa gets Presence of Gond on Pili-Pala.
Nassif gets Faerie Swarm.
Wafo-Tapa attacks with some Gond tokens.
Nassif flashes Plumeveil to block.
Nassif attacks with fliers.
Wafo-Tapa builds up to eight tokens.
Nassif wins the fliers versus tokens race.
Nassif mulligans.
Nassif gets Cemetery Puca.
Wafo-Tapa gets Wildslayer Elves.
Nassif gets Briarberry Cohort.
Wafo-Tapa tries Murderous Redcap.
Nassif counters with Spell Siphon.
Wafo-Tapa gets Foxfire Oak.
Wafo-Tapa takes the lead 12-11 on life.
Nassif starts chump-blocking Foxfire Oak.
Nassif keeps attacking in the air.
Nassif wins the race.
"One awesome play, though, from Guillaume Wafo-Tapa in defeat, the kind of thing that, really, we could all learn a lot from. He gets to two mana, and he has Manamorphose to generate two mana of any colour, and he uses it simply to draw a card because he wants to try and get to a third land. He sees a land off the top, great, he lays his land. He has in his hand Gleeful Sabotage. Ritzka has in play a 2/1 Tatterkite. Guillaume Wafo-Tapa burns for two, decides not to kill the Tatterkite. Why? Because three turns later, a Scuttlemutt's on the board. You think, is he going to kill that? No. Three turns later, Reaper King comes down. 'Thanks, I'll kill that.' Well worth two extra life.
"When you're on twenty life, right up against a mulligan to four, to then deliberately take two mana burn you don't have to -- that's forethought under pressure."
-Rich Hagon
One other thing that came up sometimes in podcasts was Wafo-Tapa's testing group for PT Hollywood. It contained Remi Fortier before GP Brussels, and and it contains Manuel Bucher and the Ruel brothers after the GP. Plumeveil might go well in the Olivier Ruel Turbo-Dandan deck.
Sunday, 11 May 2008
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