ESL One Birmingham 2026 Grand Finals Preview: Tundra Esports Await as Xtreme Gaming Complete Three Reverse Sweeps
ESL One Birmingham 2026 has delivered one of the most dramatic playoff brackets in recent Dota 2 history, and the grand finals are set for today — March 29, 2026. Tundra Esports have secured the first finals spot after dismantling Team Yandex 2-0 in the upper bracket finals, and now they wait at bp pulse LIVE arena while Team Yandex and Xtreme Gaming slug it out in the lower bracket finals for the right to challenge them in a best-of-five.
This is the first major LAN on Patch 7.41 — the patch that removed all facets, added nine new items, and turned the meta upside down mid-tournament. Alchemist is back as a first-phase menace, Leshrac is terrorizing mid lanes, and teams that adapted fastest are the ones still standing. Below, we break down every playoff result so far, the hero meta that is defining Birmingham, the key players to watch in the grand finals, and what this tournament means for the road to TI 2026 in Shanghai.
Table of Contents
- Tournament Overview and Format
- Group Stage Recap: Who Made Playoffs
- Upper Bracket Playoffs Breakdown
- Lower Bracket: Xtreme Gaming’s Cinderella Run
- Hero Meta at Birmingham on Patch 7.41
- Key Players to Watch in the Grand Finals
- Grand Finals Preview and Predictions
- What Birmingham Means for TI 2026 Shanghai
- What You Can Learn for Your Ranked Pubs
- FAQ
Tournament Overview and Format
ESL One Birmingham 2026 is part of the ESL Pro Tour and features 16 teams competing for $1,000,000 USD in prize money (split as $750,000 player prize money and $250,000 club rewards) plus 35,460 EPT points. The event runs from March 22-29 at the bp pulse LIVE arena in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
The format is straightforward but punishing:
- Group Stage (March 22-25): Two round-robin groups of eight teams. All series are best-of-two. Top two teams per group go to the upper bracket, 3rd-4th go to the lower bracket, and the rest are eliminated.
- Playoffs (March 26-29): Double-elimination bracket. All matches are best-of-three except the Grand Finals, which is a best-of-five.
This means a team dropping from the upper bracket still has a fighting chance through the lower bracket — and as we have seen with Xtreme Gaming, that path can produce some of the most thrilling Dota of the tournament.
Prize Pool Distribution
| Place | Prize (USD) | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | $250,000 | TBD (Grand Finals today) |
| 2nd | $130,000 | TBD |
| 3rd | $100,000 | TBD |
| 4th | $70,000 | PARIVISION |
| 5th-6th | $40,000 each | Team Spirit / Aurora |
| 7th-8th | $27,500 each | MOUZ / Team Falcons |
| 9th-10th | $20,000 each | GamerLegion / Virtus.pro |
| 11th-12th | $17,500 each | BetBoom Team / paiN Gaming |
| 13th-14th | $15,000 each | Yakult Brothers / OG |
| 15th-16th | $10,000 each | REKONIX / Nigma Galaxy |
Group Stage Recap: Who Made Playoffs
The group stage ran for four days and produced some clear favorites heading into playoffs — along with a few surprises that nobody saw coming.
Group A: Yandex and Tundra Dominate
Team Yandex topped Group A with a commanding 12-2 record (5 wins, 2 draws, 0 losses). They looked like the most prepared team at the event, winning series against every opponent in their group. Tundra Esports finished second at 11-3, including a 1-1 draw against Yandex in their head-to-head — a sign that these two teams were closely matched even early in the tournament.
MOUZ took third place with an 8-6 record despite starting the tournament with a perfect Day 1. Their form dipped as the groups progressed, which turned out to be a harbinger of their playoff struggles. PARIVISION squeaked into the playoffs in fourth place at 6-8, only making it through after winning tiebreakers against GamerLegion and BetBoom Team.
| Place | Team | Record (W-D-L) | Game Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Team Yandex | 5-2-0 | 12-2 |
| 2nd | Tundra Esports | 4-3-0 | 11-3 |
| 3rd | MOUZ | 4-0-3 | 8-6 |
| 4th | PARIVISION | 2-2-3 | 6-8 |
| 5th | GamerLegion | 2-2-3 | 6-8 (elim.) |
| 6th | BetBoom Team | 2-2-3 | 6-8 (elim.) |
| 7th | Yakult Brothers | 1-3-3 | 5-9 (elim.) |
| 8th | REKONIX | 0-2-5 | 2-12 (elim.) |
Group B: Aurora’s Perfect Run and Spirit’s Confidence
Aurora Gaming had the best group stage performance of any team at the entire tournament, going 13-1 in games with a 6-1-0 series record. They only dropped a single game across all four days of groups. Team Spirit finished second at 11-3, looking solid behind Yatoro’s carry performances and Collapse’s signature playmaking.
Team Falcons, the reigning TI 2025 champions, took third at 9-5, while Xtreme Gaming barely scraped in at fourth with a 6-8 record. Nobody expected XG to go deep in the playoffs from that position — which makes what happened next all the more remarkable.
| Place | Team | Record (W-D-L) | Game Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Aurora | 6-1-0 | 13-1 |
| 2nd | Team Spirit | 5-1-1 | 11-3 |
| 3rd | Team Falcons | 3-3-1 | 9-5 |
| 4th | Xtreme Gaming | 1-4-2 | 6-8 |
| 5th | Virtus.pro | 1-3-3 | 5-9 (elim.) |
| 6th | paiN Gaming | 0-4-3 | 4-10 (elim.) |
| 7th | OG | 0-4-3 | 4-10 (elim.) |
| 8th | Nigma Galaxy | 0-4-3 | 4-10 (elim.) |
Upper Bracket Playoffs Breakdown
Upper Bracket Semifinals: Yandex 2-1 Spirit / Tundra 2-1 Aurora
The upper bracket semifinals (March 26) gave us two tight series. Team Yandex defeated Team Spirit 2-1 in a back-and-forth affair, while Tundra Esports took down Aurora 2-1 despite Aurora’s dominant group stage form.
The Aurora loss was the biggest shock of the day. A team that went 13-1 in groups suddenly looked mortal against Tundra’s superior drafting on the new patch. As Tundra’s offlaner 33 (Neta Shapira) said in a post-match interview: “We didn’t do anything special. We just played our game, and I think our ideas of the patch were a little bit better.”
Tundra notably used an Alchemist strategy in game 2, with Pure’s Alch distributing free Aghanim’s Scepters to 33’s Largo, which proved devastating. The ability for Alchemist to give Scepters without sacrificing his own farm (thanks to the reworked Greevil’s Greed in 7.41) has become one of the defining mechanics of this patch in competitive play.

Upper Bracket Finals: Tundra 2-0 Yandex
The upper bracket finals on March 28-29 was not even close. Tundra stomped Yandex in two straight games, making a statement to the rest of the tournament.
Game 1 was a 44-minute demolition job. Tundra’s three core players all had near-perfect performances:
- Pure (Dragon Knight): 16 kills, 11 assists, dominant laning phase
- bzm (Ember Spirit): 11 kills, 16 assists, constant map pressure
- 33 (Largo): 2 kills, 24 assists, controlling every teamfight
The final scoreline was 34-11 in Tundra’s favor — a statement game if there ever was one.
Game 2 was even more one-sided, ending in just 25 minutes with a 25-7 kill lead for Tundra. Bzm’s Pangolier performance (10 kills, 9 assists, 1 death) was the highlight, with Pure’s Gyrocopter adding another clean game (9 kills, 7 assists, 0 deaths). Yandex never found their footing and got swept to the lower bracket.
Lower Bracket: Xtreme Gaming’s Cinderella Run
The lower bracket at ESL One Birmingham 2026 has been defined by two incredible stories: PARIVISION punching above their weight, and Xtreme Gaming pulling off an unprecedented string of reverse sweeps.
Day 2 (March 27): Xtreme Survive Two Elimination Matches
Xtreme Gaming 2-1 MOUZ (Reverse Sweep)
MOUZ absolutely destroyed Xtreme in game 1 — a 38-12 stomp in 33 minutes where MidOne’s Sand King went 16 kills, 14 assists with a single death. It looked like Xtreme were finished.
Then Ame woke up. His Weaver in game 2 was the kind of performance carry players dream about — a 12-minute Desolator into a 21-minute Linken’s Sphere, pacing Xtreme to a 39-23 kill lead and forcing game 3. In the decider, NothingToSay’s Leshrac went 16 kills, 16 assists and completely terrorized MOUZ, as Xtreme closed it out 39-10 in 47 minutes. The Leshrac pick is becoming a recurring theme at this tournament.
PARIVISION 2-0 Team Falcons
PARIVISION pulled off the biggest upset of the day by sweeping the reigning TI 2025 champions Team Falcons 2-0. No[o]ne’s Leshrac dominated game 1 (14 kills, 13 assists, 1 death), and Satanic’s last-pick Broodmother caught Falcons completely off guard in game 2, going 14 kills, 12 assists with zero deaths. Falcons — the team that won TI just months ago — eliminated in 7th-8th place.
Xtreme Gaming 2-1 Team Spirit (73-Minute Game 3)
After already playing one grueling series, Xtreme had to go again immediately against Team Spirit. Spirit took game 1 behind Yatoro’s Alchemist and free Aghanim’s Scepter distribution. But Xtreme banned the Alchemist in game 2 and punished Spirit’s greedy draft, with NothingToSay’s Leshrac again putting up 13 kills and 14 assists.
Game 3 was the game of the tournament so far — a 73-minute back-and-forth epic. Xtreme held the lead through the laning phase and mid game, but Yatoro’s Morphling started coming online and clawing Spirit back into it. The stalemate held until past the 60-minute mark, when Xtreme’s lineup of Ame (Beastmaster), NothingToSay (Sand King), and Xxs (Slardar) reached critical mass. The combined lockdown was too much for even a late-game Morphling to handle. Xtreme eliminated Spirit and advanced to the Top 4 — completing two reverse sweeps in a single day.
Day 3 (March 28-29): The Final Four Takes Shape
PARIVISION 2-0 Aurora
Aurora’s incredible group stage form completely evaporated in the playoffs. After losing to Tundra in the upper bracket, they fell to PARIVISION 2-0 in the lower bracket. No[o]ne (Storm Spirit, 14 kills/24 assists game 1; Pangolier, 12 kills game 2) and Satanic (Monkey King game 1, Weaver game 2) were simply too much. The 13-1 group stage juggernaut was eliminated in 5th-6th place.
Xtreme Gaming 2-1 PARIVISION (Another Reverse Sweep)
PARIVISION looked like they might complete their own Cinderella story after a 22-minute stomp in game 1 — the most one-sided game of the entire tournament. Satanic’s Monkey King and No[o]ne’s Pangolier combined for 14 kills and 14 assists with one death between them while Xtreme managed a single kill in 22 minutes. It was brutal.
But Xtreme Gaming are apparently incapable of dying. Ame’s Weaver and NothingToSay’s Sand King led the comeback in game 2, with Ame finishing a perfect 8-0-9 statline. NothingToSay repeatedly devastated PARIVISION’s backlines with Burrowstrike combos, and Xtreme forced game 3. In the decider, Xtreme completed their third reverse sweep of the tournament and eliminated PARIVISION to set up the lower bracket finals against Yandex.
| Playoff Round | Match | Result | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|
| UB Semi | Yandex vs Spirit | 2-1 | Yandex advance to UB Finals |
| UB Semi | Aurora vs Tundra | 1-2 | Tundra’s patch read beats Aurora |
| LB R1 | MOUZ vs Xtreme | 1-2 | XG reverse sweep #1 |
| LB R1 | Falcons vs PARIVISION | 0-2 | TI champs eliminated |
| LB R2 | Spirit vs Xtreme | 1-2 | 73-min game 3, XG reverse sweep #2 |
| UB Finals | Yandex vs Tundra | 0-2 | Tundra stomp to grand finals |
| LB R3 | Aurora vs PARIVISION | 0-2 | Aurora’s collapse continues |
| LB R4 | Xtreme vs PARIVISION | 2-1 | XG reverse sweep #3 |
Hero Meta at Birmingham on Patch 7.41
Patch 7.41 dropped on March 24 — right in the middle of the group stage — and completely reshaped the competitive meta. The removal of all facets, nine new items, and sweeping hero changes forced teams to adapt on the fly. Here are the heroes that have defined ESL One Birmingham’s playoffs:
S-Tier: The Must-Pick/Ban Heroes
Alchemist — The Free Scepter Machine
Alchemist has become arguably the most broken hero on 7.41 in competitive play. The reworked Greevil’s Greed means he can distribute Aghanim’s Scepters to teammates without sacrificing his own item progression. Yatoro used this to devastating effect against Xtreme in the Spirit series — handing out Scepters to Collapse’s Primal Beast, Larl’s Slardar, and panto’s Jakiro in a single game. Teams have learned: if you do not first-ban Alchemist, you need a concrete plan to deal with the Scepter economy.
Leshrac — The Mid Lane Menace
Leshrac has been the breakout star of 7.41 at Birmingham. With facet removal consolidating his kit, Leshrac is now one of the highest-damage mid heroes at every stage of the game. NothingToSay played Leshrac in multiple series and put up absurd numbers every time — 16-16 against MOUZ, 13-14 against Spirit. No[o]ne also showed off Leshrac against Falcons with 14 kills and 13 assists. If you leave this hero unbanned on the current patch, you are asking for trouble.
Pangolier — Aggressive Tempo Machine
Pangolier has been a contested pick throughout the playoffs. Bzm played it to perfection in the upper bracket finals (10 kills, 9 assists, 1 death in a 25-minute game), and No[o]ne also used it effectively for PARIVISION. The hero’s ability to create early-game rotations and snowball tempo advantages is extremely strong on 7.41, where the meta rewards aggressive early movements.
A-Tier: High Priority Picks
| Hero | Role | Why It Works | Key Player |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weaver | Carry | Incredible mobility, Desolator timing punishes passive lanes | Ame (Xtreme Gaming) |
| Monkey King | Carry | Lane dominator, Boundless Strike timing with new items | Satanic (PARIVISION) |
| Sand King | Mid / Offlane | Burrowstrike combos devastate in teamfights, strong with Aghs | NothingToSay / MidOne |
| Ember Spirit | Mid | Global presence, late-game scaling, flexible builds | bzm (Tundra) |
| Dragon Knight | Mid / Carry | Tanky frontline, tower pressure, reliable in all phases | Pure (Tundra) |
| Beastmaster | Offlane | Vision control, versatile builds, flex pick for 3+ years running | 33 (Tundra) / Ame |
| Naga Siren | Carry | 5.7% winrate spike post-7.41, better innate and talents | Satanic (PARIVISION) |
| Storm Spirit | Mid | Classic aggressive mid, punishes greedy drafts | No[o]ne (PARIVISION) |
The Alchemist Problem
The elephant in the room is Alchemist’s Scepter distribution. In pubs, Alchemist is already climbing to the top of winrate charts, and in competitive play he is either first-banned or first-picked in most games. The hero completely warps the game economy — a team with an Alchemist effectively has a 4-5 item advantage by the 30-minute mark because of free Scepters. Expect Valve to address this in 7.41b or 7.42, but for now, this is the meta we are playing in.

Key Players to Watch in the Grand Finals
Whether the grand finals end up being Tundra vs Yandex or Tundra vs Xtreme, these are the players who will decide the outcome.
Pure (Tundra Esports) — Carry
Ivan “Pure” Moskalenko has been the most consistent carry player at Birmingham. His Dragon Knight and Gyrocopter performances in the upper bracket finals were clinical — 16/0/11 and 9/0/7 respectively. Pure does not make flashy highlight plays; he wins lanes, farms efficiently, and positions perfectly in teamfights. That consistency is exactly what makes Tundra so hard to beat.
bzm (Tundra Esports) — Mid
Bozhidar “bzm” Bogdanov has shown incredible versatility on the new patch. His Ember Spirit and Pangolier have both looked elite-tier at Birmingham. The 25-minute Pangolier stomp against Yandex in the upper bracket finals was one of the most dominant mid performances of the entire tournament.
33 (Tundra Esports) — Offlane
Neta “33” Shapira is widely considered the player most favored by Patch 7.41. His hero pool naturally includes many of the heroes that got buffed — Batrider, Doom, Beastmaster, Largo. In his interview with Insider Gaming at Birmingham, 33 was characteristically understated: “I woke up at 4am, I saw there was a patch, and I was like, ‘Okay, I guess I’m not sleeping anymore tonight.’ I read the patch for like an hour, and I lost like four pubs in a row.” Despite the rough start to his patch experience, his Largo and other offlane picks have been dominant in actual tournament games.
Ame (Xtreme Gaming) — Carry
If Xtreme make it past Yandex in the lower bracket finals, it will be because of Wang “Ame” Chunyu. His Weaver has been the hero of Xtreme’s entire lower bracket run — from the reverse sweep against MOUZ (15 kills, 15 assists, 2 deaths in game 2) to the perfect 8-0-9 game against PARIVISION. Ame on Weaver with a fast Desolator timing is one of the most terrifying sights in competitive Dota right now.
NothingToSay (Xtreme Gaming) — Mid
Cheng “NothingToSay” Jin Xiang has been the other half of Xtreme’s engine. His Leshrac and Sand King have consistently produced huge damage numbers and key teamfight contributions. The 16-16 Leshrac game against MOUZ and the clutch Sand King high-ground defense against PARIVISION were both tournament-defining moments.
Grand Finals Preview and Predictions
Today’s Schedule (March 29, 2026)
| Match | Time (UTC) | Time (Dubai/GST) | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| LB Finals: Yandex vs Xtreme Gaming | 12:00 UTC | 4:00 PM | Best of 3 |
| Grand Finals: Tundra vs Winner | 16:00 UTC | 8:00 PM | Best of 5 |
Scenario 1: Tundra vs Yandex Grand Finals
If Yandex beat Xtreme in the lower bracket finals, we get a rematch of the upper bracket finals that Tundra won 2-0. Yandex will need to make significant adjustments to their drafting to have any shot — Tundra completely outmaneuvered them in the UB Finals, particularly in terms of tempo and lane matchups. The concern for Yandex is that Tundra seem to have a read on their playstyle. However, a team as talented as Yandex should not be counted out, and they will have had time to review their mistakes.
Scenario 2: Tundra vs Xtreme Gaming Grand Finals
This is the more dangerous matchup for Tundra. Xtreme Gaming have shown they are nearly impossible to eliminate — three reverse sweeps in a row is not luck, it is mental fortitude and adaptability. Ame and NothingToSay are both playing at an elite level right now, and Xtreme’s ability to adjust mid-series has been the defining trait of their lower bracket run.
The concern for Xtreme is fatigue. They have played more games than any other team at this tournament, including a 73-minute thriller. Tundra, meanwhile, have been sitting comfortably in the upper bracket and will be fresh for the best-of-five. That rest advantage is significant in a long series.
Our Prediction
Tundra Esports 3-1. Regardless of who comes out of the lower bracket, Tundra are the favorites. They have been the most consistent team all tournament, they have a clear read on the 7.41 meta, and they have the home crowd advantage with UK player Ari on their roster. A fourth trophy of the 2025-2026 season for Tundra would cement them as the clear frontrunners heading into TI 2026.
That said, if it is Xtreme in the finals, do not be surprised if they steal a game or two. A team that can reverse sweep three times in a row has something special going on right now.
What Birmingham Means for TI 2026 Shanghai
ESL One Birmingham is a major EPT event, and the results here directly impact the standings for The International 2026 in Shanghai. Here is what to watch for:
- Tundra Esports are building an incredibly strong case for a top-3 EPT finish. Four tournament wins in a single season would be historic and virtually guarantee them a direct TI invite.
- Team Yandex continue to show they are a consistent top-4 team globally. After winning PGL Wallachia Season 7, a strong Birmingham showing adds to their TI resume.
- Xtreme Gaming have likely secured enough EPT points with their Top 3 finish to be firmly in TI qualification contention. Ame may finally get another shot at Dota’s biggest prize.
- Team Falcons (TI 2025 champions) had a disappointing 7th-8th finish. They will need strong results in the remaining EPT events to defend their standing.
- Aurora Gaming showed they can dominate group stages but need to prove themselves in playoff pressure situations. Their 5th-6th finish is decent but not what they were hoping for after a 13-1 group stage.
- MOUZ continue to underperform at tier 1 events after their PGL Wallachia Season 6 victory. MidOne admitted their confidence was at “six out of ten” heading into the playoffs.
What You Can Learn for Your Ranked Pubs
You do not need to be a pro player to benefit from the lessons of ESL One Birmingham. Here are the key takeaways you can apply to your ranked games right now on Patch 7.41:
1. Alchemist Is Free MMR Right Now
The Scepter distribution mechanic is as strong in pubs as it is in pro play. Even in lower brackets where coordination is minimal, handing a free 4,200-gold item to your offlaner or mid at 20-25 minutes creates an insurmountable advantage. Alch is currently sitting at one of the highest carry winrates across all brackets.
2. Leshrac Mid Is Back
If you played Leshrac mid in previous patches and dropped him when facets pushed him toward support, it is time to pick him up again. His consolidated kit on 7.41 gives him everything he needs to dominate mid lane and then take over teamfights. The Bloodstone into BKB build path that NothingToSay and No[o]ne have been using is the standard right now.
3. Weaver Carry with Fast Desolator
Ame has shown what a properly-timed Weaver can do. In pubs, the key is to hit your Desolator timing before 14 minutes and then immediately start taking aggressive fights. Weaver’s mobility makes him very hard to punish in uncoordinated pub environments, and Desolator’s armor reduction makes towers melt.
4. Tempo Wins Games on This Patch
The teams that won at Birmingham are the ones that play aggressively from minute one. Tundra and PARIVISION both showed that early rotations and lane pressure translate into massive mid-game leads on 7.41. In your pubs, prioritize heroes that come online early and force the pace. Sitting back and farming for 30 minutes is not how this patch works.
5. Adapt Your Hero Pool
33 had the right attitude when the patch dropped mid-tournament: read the notes, jump into pubs, and figure it out. If your old heroes got changed significantly by 7.41, spend a few unranked games testing new options before jumping into ranked. The players climbing fastest right now are the ones who adapted their pools immediately.
Struggling to Climb on Patch 7.41?
The meta shifted hard with the removal of facets and nine new items. If your MMR took a hit because your heroes got changed, our Immortal-rank boosters already know exactly which heroes and strategies dominate on the new patch.