Pre–LCS Early in his career, in 2016, Ritchie played for Cloud9 Challenger in the
League of Legends Challenger Series, as a
substitute. In December 2016, Challengers Series team eUnited bought out Ritchie's contract from Cloud9.
Cloud9 In late 2017, Ritchie signed with
Cloud9, as their starting top laner on the main roster for the
2018 NA LCS season. At the end of the Spring Split, Ritchie won the league's Rookie of the Split award. In the Summer Split, Ritchie and Cloud9 reached the semifinals, where they faced
Team Liquid; however, they lost the match, 0–3. Cloud9 qualified for the
2018 World Championship as North America's third seed, where Ritchie helped the team reach their best international finish in the organization's history, reaching the semifinals. At the end of the year, Ritchie was invited to the 2018 All-Star Event as one of three North American representatives. The following season, Ritchie was named to the 2019 LCS Spring Split All-Pro first team. Ritchie missed two weeks of the 2019 Summer Split due to a wrist injury, however despite the missed games, he was named to the LCS All-Pro second team at the end of the split. Cloud9 reached the 2019 LCS Summer Split finals, marking the second LCS finals appearance for Ritchie; the team lost to Team Liquid in the finals by a score of 2–3. Cloud9 qualified for the
2019 World Championship, marking the second time Ritchie had attended the World Championship. In the
2020 Spring Split, Ritchie and Cloud9 finished the regular season with a record, tying an LCS record. The team went on to sweep
FlyQuest, 3–0, in the LCS finals, giving Ritchie his first LCS title. Ritchie, alongside the entire Cloud9 roster, was named to the All–Pro first team, although Ritchie was the only member of Cloud9 to not be in the top-10 voting for the Spring Split Most Valuable Player award. The following split, Ritchie was named to the LCS All-Pro first team and was a nominee for the splits MVP award. However Cloud9 fell early in the playoffs, and for the first time in his LCS career, Ritchie did not qualify for
Worlds. After the 2020 season, Cloud9 announced that they would be retaining their entire roster for the
2021 LCS season; however, after LEC Star
Luka "Perkz" Perković became available for trade, he was subsequently acquired by Cloud9 in October 2020, and Academy player Fudge was promoted to the starting lineup, replacing Ritchie in the toplane.
FlyQuest In November 2020,
FlyQuest bought out Ritchie's contract from Cloud9 for a reported . Through the 2021 Spring Split and half of the 2021 Summer Split, FlyQuest amassed only a 9–24 record, with Ritchie posting the worst
kill-death ratio among all LCS players up until July in the Summer Split.
Golden Guardians In July 2021, FlyQuest sold Ritchie's contract to
Golden Guardians, who had a 8–25 record at that point in the season. At the time of signing, Golden Guardians also agreed to extend his contract through the 2023 season.
Dignitas After the 2023 season, Golden Guardians left
League of Legends, and esports as a whole, releasing Ritchie in the process. Ritchie would not be signed by a team for the
2024 first split, but signed with Dignitas on May 7, in time for the Summer split. Dignitas would finish 5th in that split, failing to qualify for the
2024 World Championship in the final LCS split.
Lyon On December 23, 2024, Ritchie was announced as the top laner for Lyon, a team formed as a merger between former
LLA teams Rainbow7 and Six Karma, in the newly-formed LTA North Conference (which replaced the LCS). == References ==