Houston Outlaws parts ways with 3 late-season acquisitions

Even the season's bronze medal team is cleaning house.

Photo via Joe Brady by Blizzard Entertainment

Overwatch League “rostermania” has so far been filled with upper management swaps and retirement posts. But now, the season’s third-place team is surprisingly the first to make large-scale player drops. 

Recommended Videos

The Houston Outlaws announced today that the organization is parting ways with supports Kim “Creative” Young-wan and Joseph “Lep” Cambriani, as well as tank Tomas “Doge” Kongsøre. This is the first multiple-player announcement of the 2022 offseason. 

All three players were acquired in the latter half of the 2022 season. Houston acquired Lep and Doge in early August, hoping the Overwatch Contenders staples could fill in the missing pieces of its roster and cover any meta changes. Creative was acquired as a part of a trade deal that sent former Outlaws flex support Kim “lr1s” Seung-hyun to the Seoul Dynasty.   

https://twitter.com/Outlaws/status/1590796489441259520

Unfortunately for the late-season signees, none of them saw much playing time aside from Creative, who stepped into the starting support lineup alongside Mun “Lastro” Jungwon. Doge and Lep both saw a minimal amount of stage time as the Outlaws fully committed to running veteran DPS player Dante “Danteh” Cruz in the tank role. 

Creative and Lastro made for a dynamic duo when it mattered, however, properly supporting the team’s DPS superstars in the playoffs. 

Houston took third place in the Overwatch League postseason bracket, falling to the San Francisco Shock in the losers finals. That result, along with a 16-8 regular season record, made 2022 the most successful year in the team’s history. 

Author
Image of Liz Richardson
Liz Richardson
Liz is a freelance writer and editor from Chicago. Her favorite thing is the Overwatch League; her second favorite thing is pretending iced coffee is a meal. She specializes in educational content, patch notes that (actually) make sense, and aggressively supporting Tier 2 Overwatch. When she's not writing, Liz is expressing hot takes on Twitter and making bad life choices at Target.