Forced to Rewind Time, I Became the World Champion

In the Spring Split of S13, during a crucial match between RNG and TT, RNG used a time-rewind ability, sending TT's head coach, Yang Jingyu, back to the Summer Split of 2019.

At this time...

Chapter Thirteen: The Battle for the Second Dragon (Please add to your favorites and read on!)

Yang Jingyu kept Kennen stuck in the top lane, preventing Kennen from coming to the bottom lane.

After both sides traded one for two, Kennen's subsequent arrival was ineffective.

Yang Jingyu chose to help his teammates take the Rift Herald, and then returned to base to go to the bottom lane.

At the same time, this was something EDG didn't expect, as DMO actually chose to switch lanes.

Although Jinoo was constantly pressured and harassed by Yang Jingyu in the top lane, he didn't lose any tower plates.

DMO's bot lane duo has now brought the Rift Herald to the top lane, and their intentions are quite clear.

On the EDG side, jiejie's Olaf could only choose to move downwards, trying to put pressure on Yang Jingyu.

But Yang Jingyu wasn't afraid of them at all. With all his skills and Flash, he didn't even need to retreat to the second tower. Even if the enemy tower-dived to attack him, Yang Jingyu could leave immediately.

Kennen, on the other hand, was in a terrible situation, facing three opponents plus the Rift Herald, and had to retreat to the bushes to hide in.

EDG, on the other hand, knew they couldn't afford to suffer such a loss for nothing.

Meiko directed his teammates to dive the Prince.

At this moment, not only did they have their bot lane duo and jungler, but Scout also arrived with his bomb-filled plane.

He didn't intend to use the explosive charge to kill the second electric dragon; he just wanted to kill the prince and then destroy DMO's first tower.

After Scout disappeared from Twila, Yang Jingyu knew that the enemy was definitely going to dive his turret.

Yang Jingyu can still retreat now, but if he does, the defensive tower will be destroyed by the opponent for nothing.

Yang Jingyu thought that at worst, he could trade his own life and a defensive tower for the opponent's top lane second tower and mid lane tower plating, which would be a win for them.

Therefore, at this moment, Yang Jingyu did not retreat but chose to defend the tower to the death.

As for the half-zone principle, it is something to be followed when there is no profit to be made. As a coach, he naturally understands the value of doing so.

For EDG, Meiko still goes first.

They first pushed the lane with the siege minion into the turret, and then Meiko started with his ultimate, but he didn't use his hook.

Yang Jingyu was standing inside the defensive tower, so the hook could only reach the defensive tower.

If Meiko chooses to take a few steps forward, he will be killed by the turret without Flash, because he will have to take the first wave of turret damage.

Yang Jingyu had anticipated Meiko's move. Generally speaking, when Titan is attacked, you should quickly use skills or Flash to create distance, as far as possible. But Yang Jingyu did not do that. If he had, he would have been killed between the first and second towers.

So the instant Titan unleashed his ultimate, Yang Jingyu turned around and used his ultimate to trap both iboy's Kai'Sa and Meiko's Titan within the circle, while simultaneously activating Golden Aegis to block iboy's Icathian Rain.

For a moment, Olaf, who was charging forward with his ultimate ability and two axes, was dumbfounded, because he was blocked outside the stone wall.

iboy remained calm, using his ultimate skill to pull out the stone wall and start targeting Yang Jingyu's prince.

At the same time, Scout's plane, carrying a missile pack, performed a Valkyrie dive, slamming Yang Jingyu into the wall of his own ultimate ability, Cataclysmic Strike. Yang Jingyu didn't even try to undo his ultimate, taking the damage head-on.

However, his equipment wasn't good enough, and he collapsed after less than five seconds.

Even though he couldn't hold out for five seconds, Meiko, who didn't have Flash, was traded for by him, and the plane was also at half health, which bought more time for the mid lane tower plate.

Currently, EDG's mid-lane turret has half its health remaining.

If we can secure the second Rift Herald, we can destroy their mid-lane tower.

After destroying their mid-lane tower, it became extremely difficult for them to establish vision control, whether it was during the lane swap phase or when their duo lane was positioned in the mid-lane.

In a losing game, a Titan who tries to ward is essentially feeding the enemy.

Most importantly, EDG's second top lane tower was destroyed. In order to prevent the high ground tower from being destroyed, Jinoo activated his ultimate to clear the wave and also eliminated the Rift Herald.

DMO instantly gained a lead of over 3,000 gold over EDG.

To be honest, throughout the entire S9 season, DMO, except when facing IG, seemed powerless. Against any other team, they were able to gain a certain lead in the early game.

This is thanks to Xiaopeng's jungling rhythm; he was incredibly strong in the first fifteen minutes.

But after the laning phase ends, the entire DMO team will act like headless flies, feeding you a huge wave every seventeen or eighteen minutes.

This is why DMO, despite having good players, can only rank in the lower half of the LPL.

Xiao Peng's strength at this moment, even his rhythm from fifteen minutes ago, is more powerful than Ultraman Hacker. He's not just Xiao Peng; he's the Golden-Winged Roc.

As for why they couldn't gain an advantage against iG, it's because the skill gap between their mid and top laners was too large.

At this point, the "meat chicken" wasn't Song Lijin anymore; he was Song Sheng, the true master of chickens!

Another common problem among LPL junglers is that they always like to gank TheShy, and TheShy is indeed easy to gank.

But what good would it do to catch him dead?

Even with a 0/2 score, he plays like he's 2/0. Once he returns to lane from the fountain, he continues to dominate your top lane.

This is a principle that LPL coaches only understood at the beginning of Season 11.

But what good is understanding this now? IG has already fallen from grace. TheShy, once the world's best top laner, is losing every game, going 0-for-1.

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