− | '''Marcus "Sucram" Dolejsi''''s long, strange [[Perfect Dark]] history began in May of 2000, when he was the 26th player to join the young PD [[Elite]]. Though many talented players had entered the rankings before him (such as [[Sterling Neblett]], [[Infil]], and [[DarkHawk]]), Sucram was the first in history to come into the league with an impressive set of times already in place. By the end of the Summer he had climbed into 5th place, a spot that he would, incredibly, manage to hold for over two years. His constant PRs earned him both a record number of POM mentions and the title of PD's "Mr. Consistency." Marcus peaked in third place in early 2002. | + | '''Marcus "Sucram" Dolejsi''''s long, strange [[Perfect Dark]] history began in May of 2000, when he was the 26th player to join the [[Perfect Dark Elite]]. Though many talented players had entered the rankings before him (such as [[Sterling Neblett]], [[Infil]], and DarkHawk), Sucram was the first in history to come into the league with an impressive set of times already in place. By the end of the Summer he had climbed into 5th place in the [[Perfect Dark]] rankinga, a spot that he would, incredibly, manage to hold for over two years. His constant PRs earned him both a record number of POM mentions and the title of PD's "Mr. Consistency." Marcus peaked in third place in early 2002. |
− | Sucram's greatest accomplishments were undoubtedly his untouchable Defection WRs (:37 SA/1:23 PA), set in early 2002. His greatest ''downfall'', however, was his failure to tape those record-setting runs, a decision that sparked the largest controversy in PD history. This long-running Defection debate not only tarnished Sucram's Elite reputation, it also spearheaded the development of an official [http://the-elite.net/proofpolicy.html Elite Proof Policy], to stop problems like those caused by Sucram and [[Steven Zwartjes]] from ever happening again. | + | Sucram's greatest accomplishments were undoubtedly his untouchable [[Defection]] World Records (:37 SA/1:23 PA), set in early 2002. His greatest ''downfall'', however, was his failure to tape those record-setting runs, a decision that sparked the largest controversy in Perfect Dark history. This long-running Defection debate not only tarnished Sucram's Elite reputation, it also spearheaded the development of an official [http://the-elite.net/proofpolicy.html Elite Proof Policy] to put a halt to what was threatening to become a recurring problem. |
| + | Since his retirement from PD, Sucram (like fellow legends [[Disco]], [[marsh]], and [[Paragon]]) has gone on to become an excellent CounterStrike player. He returns to the Elite each year alongside his brother [[Mikers]] to compete in NFL and March Madness prediction contests. |
− | Since his PD retirement Sucram (like fellow PD legends [[Disco]], [[marsh]], and [[Paragon]]) has gone on to become an excellent CounterStrike player. He returns to the Elite each year alongside his brother [[Mikers]] to compete in NFL and March Madness prediction contests.
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