The BLAST.tv Austin Major 2025 Grand Final with Vitality winning with a score of 2-1 demolishing their opponent TheMongolZ on the decider map with a score of 13-6 was packed with thrilling plays, big names, and surprise performances—but not everything went as expected. While ZywOo was named MVP, the real impact came from unexpected players whose stats tell a different story.
This article breaks down CS2 Grand Final Stats you didn’t see on the scoreboard. You will find things such as clutch stats, AWP kills, and support impact; here are the 10 most impressive performances from the biggest match of the tournament.
Want more context? Check our full BLAST.tv Austin Major Recap.
Contents
- 1 10 Facts of BLAST Austin Major Grand Final
- 2 apEX: The Real MVP of the Grand Final
- 3 ZywOo: King of Smoke and Wallbangs
- 4 bLitz: Most Effective Support Player
- 5 910: The Grand Final’s AWP God
- 6 Techno: The Clutch Master
- 7 Senzu: Highest Average Damage
- 8 mezii: Top Fragger of the Match
- 9 mzinho: Headshot MachineH
- 10 ropz: Fastest Killer
- 11 910’s ACE: A One-Man Army Moment
- 12 Final Thoughts: What the Stats Really Say
10 Facts of BLAST Austin Major Grand Final
apEX: The Real MVP of the Grand Final

The best player of the Grand Final was not ‘ZywOo’, as expected when you see him getting the MVP, but his team’s in-game leader, ‘apEX’, who not only led his team with all his experience and calls inside the game but also had outstanding performance fragging-wise, having a rating of 1.37 by the end of the match, according to HLTV.org rating.
This shows his insane ability to stay at the elite level of Counter-Strike for many years. Even after changing his role to the in-game leader, he can still be the best fragger. Even under the most pressure, he can still sometimes be a better fragger than the world’s best player, ‘ZywOo’.
ZywOo: King of Smoke and Wallbangs

Even though ‘ZywOo’ wasn’t the best fragger, he showed his mastery in CS2 mechanics:
- 6 kills through smoke
- 3 kills through walls
- 80.6% of his pistol hits were headshots.
This kind of stat shows why he is one of the best players in the game. Even when he’s not fragging like crazy, he still makes a lot of impact frags.
bLitz: Most Effective Support Player

‘bLitz’ was the most successful support player, trading his teammate’s deaths with a kill 12 times, the highest number. It makes him a perfect team player, as whenever his teammate was about to make an open frag on any part of the map, he was there to trade him or get extra kills with the help of his teammate.
910: The Grand Final’s AWP God

‘910’, even though he was playing for the losing team, was the best sniper of the Grand Final as he had 15 of the total 33 kills made with the AWP. He was also leading in the opening duels, winning 9 out of 14 duels he had.
Techno: The Clutch Master

‘Techno’ has long been known as a skilled player in clutch situations, and he proved himself once more by winning five out of six clutches, three of them 1v1 and two of them 1v2.
Senzu: Highest Average Damage

‘Senzu’ had the highest Average Damage per Round throughout the Grand Final match, which is 95.3.
mezii: Top Fragger of the Match

‘mezii’ made the most kills in the Grand Final, which was 47 kills.
mzinho: Headshot MachineH

‘mzinho’ had the highest headshot-percentage rate with rifle weapons, with 38.6% of all his hits being headshots.
ropz: Fastest Killer

‘ropz’ had the best average time-to-kill with rifles, which is 380ms to kill a player. A player with this high TTK number means that whenever he spots his enemy, it’s almost an instant kill, giving his team an instant advantage.
910’s ACE: A One-Man Army Moment

‘910’ had another thing to his name in the finals as he was the one to make an ACE in the Grand Final.
You can find all these players’ stats on the HLTV.org Grand Final Match Page.
Final Thoughts: What the Stats Really Say
The CS2 Grand Final player stats reveal a match full of surprises and unsung heroes. From Techno’s clutch dominance to apEX’s leadership fragging, this was more than a duel of stars—it was a showcase of depth and strategy.
Platforms like Scope.gg and community threads on Reddit allow us to go beyond surface MVPs and see what really makes a CS2 player great in 2025.