When the late Marty Schottenheimer implored his Browns players to “get the gleam” during a motivational speech before the 1986 AFC Championship Game, he could have been talking to Dwayne Wood.
Yes, the man known to the competitive Madden NFL community as “Cleff The God” already has a diamond-encrusted PlayStation controller pendant that is plenty shiny. But Wood wants more:
A gold-plated Madden Championship Series belt.
The Madden Championship Series is a set of tournaments, including four “live events,” tentpole competitions featuring games broadcast live on Twitch and YouTube, the last of which is the Ultimate Madden Bowl. If the Ultimate Madden Bowl is like the Super Bowl, then the tournaments that precede it in the MCS are like conference championship games. The final eight competitors in each live event earn points toward qualifying for the Ultimate Madden Bowl. The winners capture not just substantial credibility among Madden gamers, but also a coveted Madden belt.
Wood is among the final eight competitors who will compete live in the Ultimate Thanksgiving tournament, which offers a $260,000 prize pool split among its participants, on Nov. 9 and Nov. 16. It is the second live event set within the life cycle of Madden NFL 23.
This isn’t Wood’s first time in a live event’s final eight. He’s reached the live portion (the first phase of each live event is comprised of online competition) in nine previous Madden events in his career, owning a 60-18 career Madden record. But one massive void remains on his resume: He has yet to win a belt.
Wood has come close. He’s lost twice in a live event final, including via a last-second interception. He also fell short in the semifinals of another tournament he was expected to win, robbed in that case of a chance to face eventual champion Noah Johnson, better known as NoahUpNxt, the current No. 2 Madden player in the world.
“I ain’t a crier, but those two right there, they hurt me,” Wood said in October. “I hate losing. I like winning, but losing, that feeling right there, I hate it.”
Wood now has another chance to secure a belt that has eluded him for the last four years. The 26-year-old believes his time is now — and he isn’t alone.
“I’m not gonna lie — it would be the greatest feeling in the world,” Wood said.