
LYON just won the LCS Lock-In 2026 finals against Cloud9 with a score of 3-1. After winning every single series this split, C9 was the heavy favorite. With this loss, C9 barely fails to qualify for the international tournament for the sixth time in a row. On the other side, LYON wins the LCK Lock-In 2026 finals as a complete underdog.
LYON came into the finals after a rocky start to the season. Winning one match against seventh place Dignitas before losing the next two, the team was in the bottom half heading into the playoffs.
With this format, that means starting in the loser’s bracket. From there though, they picked off every team that fell down. 3-0 against FlyQuest, 3-1 against Team Liquid, 3-1 against Sentinels. By this time, Cloud9 had already overcome every obstacle effortlessly, but LYON had the momentum.

LYON wins the LCS Lock-In Playoffs Finals. Image Source: Riot Games
In game 1 of the LCS Lock-In 2026 finals, the two teams traded blow for blow. Then, after minute 30, one good fight set C9 ahead for the rest of the game. As this was how Cloud9 won most of their maps this split, that was a grim opener for LYON.
Saint took game 2 into his own hands. Starting the game with a solo kill despite a bad matchup, he created a constant pressure advantage in the mid lane for his team. For a long time, LYON kept their lead without increasing it. Then, a few fights and Cloud9’s Nexus explodes.
Game 3 was a constant brawl. C9’s equalized LYON’s early game lead at minute 20, and the two squads spent the next 20 minutes fist-fighting it out without either team getting ahead. One single decisive fight put LYON on match point despite C9’s Hextech Soul.
Neither team intended to fight any less in the final game. With skirmishes lasting up to 90 seconds, LYON and C9 remained within reach of each other until one major fight win gave LYON the crown at minute 30.

Cloud9 lost the LCS Lock-In Playoffs Finals. Image Source: Riot Games
The last time C9 played at a regular international event in League of Legends was the 2023 World Championship.
Ever since the team joined the NA LCS in 2013, it’s been a powerhouse each split. Over these 13 years, they’ve been a top 3 NA team 23 out of 29 times. Not just that, Cloud9 is also the strongest American team at international events.
All of these remain true. C9 is still as much of a powerhouse, but they now always barely fail to cross the finish line. In five of the last six splits, they excelled in the regular season, and lost in the playoffs just one single place below the qualification threshold.
| Split | Regular season finish | Playoffs finish | Threshold for qualification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lock-In 2026 | 1st | 2nd | 1st |
| Split 3 2025 | 1st | 4th | 3rd |
| Split 2 2025 | 1st | 2nd | 1st |
| Split 1 2025 | 2nd | 3rd – 4th | 1st |
| Summer 2024 | 2nd | 4th | 3rd |
| Spring 2024 | 3rd | 3rd | 2nd |
This split, they’d won every single series and gone 13-1 in game score until the finals. All bets were on Cloud9 again, but they will have to wait one more split to get another chance. On the other side, LYON will represent North America at First Stand 2026 in Brazil!
Featured Image Source: Riot Games

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