TaZ
TaZ | |
---|---|
Current team | |
Team | Honoris |
Game | Counter-Strike: Global Offensive |
Role | In-game leader |
Personal information | |
Name | Wiktor Wojtas |
Born | 1986/1987 (age 34–35)[1] |
Nationality | Polish |
Career information | |
Games | Counter-Strike 1.6 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive |
Playing career | 2004–present |
Team history | |
2004–2007 | Pentagram G-Shock |
2007–2009 | MeetYourMakers |
2009 | Wicked eSports |
2009 | Vitriolic |
2009–2010 | AGAiN |
2010–2011 | Frag eXecutors |
2011 | AGAiN |
2011–2013 | ESC Gaming |
2013 | Universal Soldiers |
2013–2014 | AGAiN |
2014–2018 | Virtus.pro |
2018–2019 | Kinguin |
2019 | devils.one |
2019 | Aristocracy |
2019-2020 | ARCY |
2020–present | Honoris |
Career highlights and awards | |
|
Wiktor Wojtas, better known as TaZ, is a Polish Counter-Strike player who was the in-game leader for Virtus.pro.[2] He is one of the "" group of Polish CS players who won many tournaments with a number of different esports teams.[3] He has also played for AGAiN, Universal Soldiers, ESC Gaming, Frag eXecutors, Vitriolic, Wicked eSports, Meet Your Makers, and Pentagram G-Shock. Wojtas has been playing professionally since 2004.[4]
TaZ and Virtus.pro famously won EMS One Katowice 2014, which was the first major to be held in Poland. They defeated Ninjas in Pyjamas 2–0 in the grand final. Over the years, TaZ and co. would rack up many tournament wins, giving them the famous nickname of "Virtus plow", notoriously having the ability to chain rounds together against their opponents in a momentum-driven playstyle. TaZ is considered one of the greatest Polish players to play Counter-Strike, alongside NEO, pasha, Loord, and LUq. TaZ and Virtus.pro won ELeague Season 1 over fnatic in the finals on July 30, 2016, ending the slump Virtus pro had been in. This would be one of the final victories VP would enjoy, and the roster which had held together since late 2013 disbanded in early 2018.[5][6][7] As of October 2016, TaZ has won $476,809, the largest single prize being $80,000 from winning ELeague Season 1.
Tournament results[]
- Bold denotes a CS:GO Major
Pentagram[]
- 1st — 2006 Cyberathlete Professional League Championship Finals
PGS Gaming[]
- 1st — World Cyber Games 2006
AGAiN[]
- 1st — World Cyber Games 2009
Frag-Executors[]
- 3rd — World Cyber Games 2010
PGS Gaming[]
- 1st — World Cyber Games 2011
Universal Soldiers[]
- 9th-12th — DreamHack Winter 2013
Virtus.pro[]
- 1st — EMS One Katowice 2014
- 3–4th — DreamHack Winter 2014
- 3-4th — ESL One Katowice 2015
- 3-4th — ESL One Cologne 2015
- 5-8th — DreamHack Open Cluj-Napoca 2015
- 5-8th — Intel Extreme Masters Season X – World Championship
- 5-8th — MLG Major Championship: Columbus
- 3–4th — ESL One Cologne 2016
- 1st — ELeague Season 1
- 1st — DreamHack ZOWIE Open Bucharest 2016[citation needed]
- 3rd — WESG 2016 World Finals[citation needed]
- 2nd — ELEAGUE Major 2017
- 1st —
- 7-8th —
References[]
- ^ Biazzo, Leonardo (May 18, 2020). "NEO and TaZ to play for HONORIS, a new Polish CS:GO team". Dot Esports. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- ^ "Profil Gracza CS:GO: Wiktor "TaZ" Wojtas - ESPORT NOW".
- ^ Podgórski, Wojciech (November 21, 2015). "Filip 'NEO' Kubski: Jeszcze do końca nie zwariowałem!". Polsat Sport. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
- ^ Kostaszuk, Marcin (March 4, 2012). "Poznaniak Filip Kubski: Małysz gier komputerowych". Głos Wielkopolski. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
- ^ "Virtus Pro decimates Fnatic in ELEAGUE grand final". dailydot.com. July 30, 2016.
- ^ "Обозреватель Киберспорта: pashaBiceps: мы проводим больше времени на соревнованиях, чем дома".
- ^ "Виктор "TaZ" Войтас: мы наконец-то вернулись в строй".
- 1986 births
- Polish esports players
- Counter-Strike players
- MeetYourMakers players
- Virtus.pro players
- Living people