Bojanic wrote:jlt wrote:Bojanic wrote:some ten years ago in Holland when Laurent Heiser lost on time when filling dame
What happened then? Was there any dispute about the result of the game?
IIRC, game was completely over, dame points were played. Heiser has clearly won.
Heiser's opponent played some threat inside his territory, which could be dangerous if not answered correctly (some kyu level).
But before that move was played, someone asked Heiser something, he turned away and got distracted, and he lost on time.
There was argument after the game, and since they argued that game was not over yet due to threat, it was declared that Heiser lost on time.
Out of the protest, he left tournament.
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IIRC it was in Amsterdam go Oza 2006.
http://www.europeangodatabase.eu/EGD/To ... n=10337085
Game was against Jurij Pljusch 4d.
Oddly, Heiser is not listed, and Pljusch was listed as being free (0+), which is not possible on this tournament.
Hello everyone,
For already quite some time, I have been intending to create an account here to participate in some discussions, but I never got around actually doing it, partly due to problems with the registration.
Now, in order to adjust some slightly inaccurate memories, I got more persistent and thanks to the help of Uberdude, I finally managed to get in

Yes, there were some analogies in the case being discussed here and my game in the Netherlands, even though it was an "offline" game:
- Both games were in the very final stage with the outcome - on the board! - already clearly decided (in the case of my game, being over 20 points ahead)
- it was the final byoyomi period
Actually (unsurprisingly) we were both playing rather fast at that stage of the game (not sure if it was already dame-filling or just the last 1-2 pointers).
So I also played my move many seconds before the end of the byoyomi period and pushed the clock (even twice, as I usually do with Ing-clocks during byoyomi).
When I was wondering why my opponent suddenly restarted "thinking", I watched at the Clock, saw that my time was still running, but it was already too late...
The decision of the referee simply was that the clock cannot be overruled. If it "says" that you have run out of time, the game is lost, case closed.
Something positive: After that event, the EGF rules were extended to allow the referee to forfeit a game due to unsportmanlike behaviour...