European League expansion is ‘inevitable’ says LEC boss, but timing shapes as big question

The LEC will go beyond 10 teams eventually.

Photo by Kirill Bashkirov via Riot Games

The League of Legends European Championship ballooning beyond 10 teams is  “inevitable,” head of League of Legends esports in EMEA at Riot Games Maximilian Peter Schmidt has admitted. But the exact timing on when LEC expansion begins is still very much up in the air⁠—not all of which Riot Games can control.

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The LEC will add more League teams eventually, it appears.

Schmidt has rekindled the European League expansion conversation after an interview with French publication L’Équipe, confirming the continental competition has plans to grow.

“I think expansion of the LEC is an inevitable thing,” Schmidt said, translated from the French interview. “We are constantly evaluating the possibilities.”

Right now, the LEC is made up of 10 franchised teams: Astralis, Excel, Fnatic, G2 Esports, MAD Lions, Misfits Gaming, SK Gaming, Team BDS, Team Vitality, and the latest European champions Rogue, who claimed their first League championship this weekend just gone in Malmö, Sweden.

There have been whispers around the League scene for some time that regional heavyweights like Karmine Corp, KOI, and more could join the scene in an expansion.

Instead, KOI is merging with champions Rogue to field a joint venture in the 2023 League season. Team Heretics is also joining the league via a Misfits sale.

Photo via KOI

But while expansion is off the cards for the 2023 LEC Spring Split and beyond, Schmidt is convinced the league will and must bring more franchised squads into the fold in the next few years to continue the LEC surge.

The question now is when, not if. And it’s a big question.

“I don’t know when it will happen, exactly… three, five, 10, 20 years [maybe],” Schmidt said. The green light has already been given but getting the timing right is everything, for Riot and the teams, according to Schmidt. “It depends on a lot of things,” he added, “some of which we don’t control.”

“And we have to work with our partner teams to make sure we make the best decision for the league all together,” Schmidt continued in the translated interview.

When the time comes, Riot will field a number of suitors for the newly-opened LEC spots in a similar fashion to when it brought franchising to Europe in 2019. Business structure, ambitions, and plans for the future will all play a role in any hopeful ventures in the League application process.

Dot Esports understands regional teams won’t be favored, either.

Photo by Michal Konkol via Riot Games

Whenever the LEC does expand, it could be on the back of a new League format: in the same interview, Schmidt confirmed the competition is tossing up options⁠—including a drop in best-of-one games across the season.

The LEC has concluded for the year now. Rogue, Fnatic, G2, and MAD are now preparing for the 2022 League World Championship, where they will represent Europe.

Correction Sept. 15 9am CT: This article has been updated to reflect Maximilian Peter Schmidt’s current job title as the head of League of Legends esports in EMEA at Riot Games.

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Isaac McIntyre
Isaac McIntyre is the Aussie Editor at Dot Esports. He previously worked in sports journalism at Fairfax Media in Mudgee and Newcastle for six years before falling in love with esports—an ever-evolving world he's been covering since 2018. Since joining Dot, he's twice been nominated for Best Gaming Journalist at the Australian IT Journalism Awards and continues to sink unholy hours into losing games as a barely-Platinum AD carry. When the League servers go down he'll sneak in a few quick hands of the One Piece card game. Got a tip for us? Email: isaac@dotesports.com.