ESL Challenger Melbourne 2022: Your complete guide to Australia’s first international CS:GO LAN in three years

After three long years, Australia finally plays host to an international CS:GO LAN in the form of ESL Challenger Melbourne, held at Olympic Park as part of DreamHack Melbourne. With $100,000 USD and a spot at ESL Pro League on the line, will our Aussie hopes hold on in front of a home crowd?


  • Grayhound, Vertex to represent home crowd
  • OG, Evil Geniuses, Imperial headline international arrivals
  • Action begins Friday @ DreamHack Melbourne

It’s finally time.

Three years on from IEM Sydney 2019, which saw tens of thousands of esports fans flock to Qudos Bank Arena to see Team Liquid claim the trophy, the international CS:GO circuit returns Down Under.

This time, it’s ESL Challenger Melbourne.

Six teams from across the globe converge on Rod Laver Arena this Friday to take on our homegrown heroes in Grayhound and Vertex for a shot at a $50,000 USD first prize purse.

But most importantly, Sunday’s champion will also book their tickets for the ESL Pro League Season 17 Conference later this year.

There can only be one, and while they may have the home crowd on their side, pundits aren’t expecting the Aussies to go the distance.

Both the ‘Hounds and the Wolfpack have been drawn into Group B, alongside Brazilian pairing Imperial, who delighted fans with a Legends Stage finish at the PGL Antwerp Major, and the ever-rising paiN Gaming.

Grayhound will be without Declan “Vexite” Portelli, instead requiring the services of the recently released Jordan “Hatz” Bajic one last time due to ESL qualification roster locks.

Vertex utilised Christian “ADDICT” Pendleton and Peter “BL1TZ” Athanasatos at last week’s IEM Rio qualifiers, with the two expected to remain with the roster at for DreamHack.

As for our international reps, OG come in as sure favourites to take out the event.

The European squad took a massive scalp at the BLAST Premier Fall Groups this past week, defeating Major champions FaZe Clan — just a week after adding AWPer Abdul “degster” Gasanov to the squad.

It’s a return to Australia for OG’s in-game leader Nemanja “nexa” Isakovic, who captained Renegades at IEM Sydney, where they finished outside the top four.

Also returning Down Under is Brazilian trio Gabriel “FalleN” Toledo, Fernando “fer” Alvarenga & Ricardo “boltz” Prass, who will represent Imperial in Melbourne next week.

FalleN & co. have made appearances at all three IEM Sydney events, taking out 2017’s inaugural tournament with SK Gaming.

We’re covering everything ESL Challenger Melbourne: schedule, streams, results and more.

ESL Challenger Melbourne Streams

ESL Challenger Melbourne streams live on Twitch. Missed the action? Catch up via the ESL CS:GO VOD page on Twitch for full replays of matches within 24 hours.

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ESL Challenger Melbourne Schedule & Results

The eight attendees at DreamHack Melbourne have been split into two GSL-format groups, with the top two emerging to play in the single-elimination finals.

All match times below are in AEST.

Group A Group B
OG Imperial Esports
Entropiq paiN Gaming
Evil Geniuses Grayhound
Wings Up Gaming Vertex ESC

ESL Challenger Melbourne — Day 1 (Friday, September 2)

Match Teams Time (AEST)
Group A Opening Matches OG v Wings Up 10:30am
Entropiq v EG.PA 12:10pm
Group B Opening Matches Imperial v Vertex 1:50pm
paiN v Grayhound 3:30pm
Group A Winners’ Match TBD 5:10pm
Group B Winners’ Match 6:50pm
Group A Elimination Match 8:30pm

ESL Challenger Melbourne — Day 2 (Saturday, September 3)

Match Teams Time (AEST)
Group B Elimination Match TBD 11am
Group A Decider Match 2:30pm
Group B Decider Match 6pm

ESL Challenger Melbourne — Day 3 (Sunday, September 4)

Match Teams Time (AEST)
Semi-Final 1 TBD 9am
Semi-Final 2 12:30pm
Grand Final 4pm

ESL Challenger Melbourne Rosters

While the summer break may have ended a few weeks back, there are numerous changes to many of the rosters in attendance this week.

OG welcomed Abdulkhalik “degster” Gasanov from Team Spirit, and with their new Russian AWPer, they have already made solid ground at BLAST Premier Fall.

Imperial revamped through Marcelo “chelo” Cespedes, with Lincoln “fnx” Lau moving to coach to replace the outgoing Luis “peacemaker” Tadeu.

FalleN and Imperial will be looking to kick off their mini-rebuild with a win in Melbourne.

This will also be EG’s LAN “debut” for their second roster since their aggressive expansion in June, where the storied North American organisation took Party Astronauts and Carpe Diem under their wings.

For our Aussie reps, Grayhound will use former member Jordan “Hatz” Bajic due to roster lock rules, while Vertex will once again utilise Peter “BL1TZ” Anathastos and Christian “ADDICT” Pendleton.

Team Squad
ESL World Ranking
OG flameZ nexa NEOFRAG F1KU degster
Imperial Esports FalleN fer boltz VINI chelo
paiN Gaming PKL biguzera hardzao zevy skullz
Grayhound Sico INS aliStair Liazz Hatz
European Qualifier
Entropiq El1an NickelBack Krad Forester mir
North American Qualifier
Evil Geniuses PwnAlone ben1337 djay Jonji viz
Oceanic Qualifier
Vertex ESC pz BRACE malta ADDICT BL1TZ
Asian Qualifier
Wings Up Gaming lan gas ChildKing MarT1n B1NGO

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