Caedrel publicly shared Los Ratones’ scrim results against LEC franchise teams. The numbers paint a clear picture of how the roster performed in practice.
Los Ratones finished with a 33-61 record across 94 scrim games against LEC teams. That works out to roughly a 35% win rate.
The disclosure is unusual because teams almost never share scrim results publicly. These practice games happen behind closed doors and stay that way. When concrete numbers like this surface, it gives fans a rare look at how teams actually perform in training.
G2 hosted Los Ratones during their time in Berlin. The team used G2’s facilities and office space for practice. That arrangement explains why G2 scrimmed them more frequently than other LEC organizations.
Proximity matters in competitive League of Legends. When teams share facilities or operate in the same building, scheduling practice becomes straightforward. You can lock in scrim blocks without coordinating across different locations or time zones.
Not every LEC team prioritized playing against Los Ratones. Some organizations like Karmine Corp and MKOI scheduled fewer scrims with the roster. That’s standard practice. Teams choose their opponents based on their own needs and patch priorities.
Caedrel apparently broke down some specific matchups during his discussion. Fans watching cited several opponent-by-opponent records including a 12-3 result against KCB and a 2-9 showing versus SK. Los Ratones reportedly went one-four against Fnatic in their practice games.
What scrims actually mean
Scrim results don’t translate directly to stage performance. Teams use practice games to test experimental drafts and work on specific scenarios. A team might forfeit early to reset a particular situation they want to practice again.
The goal isn’t always to win. Teams focus on improvement and learning rather than racking up victories in a setting where the results don’t count.

