User blog comment:MaqiiCz/Ranked Games/@comment-5545048-20130709161237

It's statistically impossible that you are always or even the vast majority of the games in the worst team. If you believe you are better than the majority of players you meet then you should statistically even win the majority of your games. Since this is not happening, this is the hard truth:

You are not as good as you think, and your teammates are not as bad as you think. Have you ever realized that there are SO much more people saying they get bad teammates than people saying they ARE one of those bad teammates? This is because when you make a mistake, you know what your thought process was and therefore you think you have an excuse for that mistake, whereas if you see a teammate you don't know make the same mistake, you have no idea why he did that, so you think he's just dumb. But that random guy is probably thinking the exact same way about you.

You can't read the thought process of your teammates nor can they explain it well enough through chat, so you can't improve the gameplay of your teammates. The solution: improve your own gameplay, acknowledge your mistakes. EVERY TIME YOU DIE and EVERY TIME YOU LOSE A TEAMFIGHT you have to look back at the situation and wonder what YOU could have done to prevent that from happening, because you only have control over your own actions.