Background: The extent of reperfusion following thrombectomy (MT) for large vessel occlusion strokes is predictive of outcomes. There is still inter-rater variability in the reperfusion scoring. We noticed that some patients present with retrograde contrast clearing of the distal branches from non-contrast-opacified flow originated from different territories. We aim to evaluate the frequency of this phenomenon (“competitive flow” (CF)), to evaluate if it has an association with the degree of leptomeningeal collaterals, and its impact on eTICI score. Methods: This is a retrospective-analysis of our MT database spanning 11/2020-12/2021. We included consecutive cases of intracranial internal carotid (i-ICA) and middle cerebral artery (MCA) M1 occlusions. CF was defined by the observation of retrograde clearing of distal MCA branches that were previously opacified by antegrade reperfusion. The clearance of the distal branches is presumed to occur due to CF via non-contrast-opacified PCA or ACA flow. The washout was considered CF if it cleared abruptly with or without forward reconstitution of antegrade opacification. Results: We included a 125 patients. Median age was 64years, 51%were males. Baseline median NIHSS was 17 and ASPECTS 9. Median last-known-well-time to puncture was 7 hours, 30.4% received tPA. Final eTICI2c-3 was achieved in 81.6%. CF was present in 32(25.6%)patients. Baseline characteristics were similar between both groups. The CF arm had better leptomeningeal single-phase-CTA-collaterals(p=0.01) and smaller CTP malignant hypoperfusion volume(p=0.06) VS non-CF. The inter-rater-agreement for eTICI score was moderate when CF was present and excellent in its absence (Krippendorf’s alpha=0.65 and 0.81,respectively). There was poor agreement (K-value=0.3) for the presence versus absence of CF between both operators. Reviewer 1 (2-year-post-training) had correctly identified 46% of patients with consensus CF vs 90% to Reviewer 2 (9-year-post-training) after the consensus read. Conclusion: CF was observed in 32% of patients. CF was found to be associated with better collateral flow, and to impact the reported procedural eTICI rating.