Ben Stewart
Nov 26, 20203 min
Updated: Nov 27, 2020
An Interview With Scottish FIFA Professionals - Gary Mcinnes & Jayden Groden
Gary Mcinnes at the FIFA19 Arena Clash
Gary: I’ve been playing FIFA since I was a kid, usually with my dad growing up, but only delved into competitive FIFA in the past 2 years.
Jayden: I've been playing FIFA for a very long time; from the Nintendo with FIFA 10, to my first Ultimate Team in 14. Since then I have just always loved playing FIFA.
Gary: I’ve always been good at games in general, but I’ve never tried to push myself to go pro on a game until I started playing alongside some other pro FIFA players and got results against them, which most players can't do.
Jayden: The moment I realised I'd shown promise of turning professional was when in the Crystal Palace ePrem play-offs, I managed to beat 'FUTWIZ Lyricz' 2-1 with a bang average team! Unfortunately, I still lost in the final.
Gary: Again, gaming has always been the thing I’ve been good at and I finally found an opportunity to try and make something of it.
Jayden: I've always been a competitive person in everything I do. When I first started to improve at FIFA and consistently beat good players in FIFA 20. I then began my journey in becoming professional.
Gary: It varies massively and depends on whether I have an upcoming tournament. If so, I’ll easily play around 6 hours a day; but if not, I'll usually switch between FIFA and some other games with my friends, just so I don’t burn myself out on FIFA.
Jayden: During the start of FIFA 21, I was playing 6-8 hours a day; however, now I've got used to the game, I only play few hours a week.
Gary: If you are eager to start competing in FIFA, you need to begin getting good FUT Weekend League results at the bare minimum. If you don’t get verified early on by hitting Elite 1 ranking, it will be tough to make events the further the game goes on.
Jayden: The main piece of advice I would give those looking to become professional is to watch other professionals and compare how they play to how you play. If you really want to become good, it's not about learning new skills and tricks, it's about sitting back and looking at patterns of play that tends to lose you games.
Gary: I’m very excited to see how we get on in CWC and going up against some of the top-ranked players in the world. The sad truth is that it will be a up-hill-battle for Jayden and I given as we haven’t invested thousands of £s into the game for the best possible team. However, I view us as dark horses and definitely capable of pulling big results when we need them.
Jayden: I'm extremely excited for the FIFAe Club World Cup. I'm with a great team and an equally great player who has proven himself a lot so far and I can't wait to get started.
COME ON THE TARTAN ARMY!!!!
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I recently graduated with a degree in International Marketing and have been a part of Esports Scotland's team since May this year.
Unfortunately, unlike many of my counterparts, I am unable to report on any
impressive esports accolades, as I'm not very good. Despite this, I try my best.