Re: EGC Drama
Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 8:00 pm
The rule is obvious and clear. The drama is why our resident rules expert RJ is absent from the conversation.
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He is busy playing in the tournament!tchan001 wrote:The rule is obvious and clear. The drama is why our resident rules expert RJ is absent from the conversation.
Oh, right. So it is even less ambiguous.user23845 wrote:Quote from EGF General Tournament Rules page:Harleqin wrote:The EGF has clear tournament rules. They say that if an accidental illegal move is noticed within three moves, the game is rewound. Also, the clock may be adjusted (!).there is no word "accidental" in it.3. Illegal move
If a player makes an illegal move, and if this is noticed within three moves, then the game should be unwound to the move just before the illegal move, and continued. The referee may allow an adjustment of the time.
CAVEAT: I am in no way suggesting Mr. Silt did this, I am simply talking about the rule as stated above.user23845 wrote:Quote from EGF General Tournament Rules page:Harleqin wrote:The EGF has clear tournament rules. They say that if an accidental illegal move is noticed within three moves, the game is rewound. Also, the clock may be adjusted (!).there is no word "accidental" in it.3. Illegal move
If a player makes an illegal move, and if this is noticed within three moves, then the game should be unwound to the move just before the illegal move, and continued. The referee may allow an adjustment of the time.
I agree with this, it appears there is some need for tightening up of the rules, or more explicit about the implications of the existing rules. The fact that players can do this implies to me that something hasn't been thought through well enough.Horibe wrote:So a player in his last few seconds of byo yomi can INTENTIONALLY make and illegal move and call for a tournament director for a ruling, all the while staring at the board to make sure of something.
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Putting aside this game's result, I think taking an appeal of this ruling was a good thing - the EGF needs to be sure of its implications.
Excuse me, this is nonsense. Dinershteyn brought this phony argument up because he has nothing else to support his point of view. Neither on the board, nor in the rules. If we start discussing intentions in cases like this, we exactly produce the kind of meta-gaming and bad blood it is supposed to prevent. (Imagine, e.g. a go server would allow to resume a game only, when the connection breakdown was not intentional to gain time. A lot of trouble, but very hard to prove either = bad rule.) Generally, regulating problems that don't exist isn't helpful.topazg wrote:I agree with this, it appears there is some need for tightening up of the rules, or more explicit about the implications of the existing rules. The fact that players can do this implies to me that something hasn't been thought through well enough.Horibe wrote:So a player in his last few seconds of byo yomi can INTENTIONALLY make and illegal move and call for a tournament director for a ruling, all the while staring at the board to make sure of something.
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Putting aside this game's result, I think taking an appeal of this ruling was a good thing - the EGF needs to be sure of its implications.
Seems like the bad blood is already here.Excuse me, this is nonsense. Dinershteyn brought this phony argument up because he has nothing else to support his point of view. Neither on the board, nor in the rules. If we start discussing intentions in cases like this, we exactly produce the kind of meta-gaming and bad blood it is supposed to prevent.
You are excusedtapir wrote:Excuse me, this is nonsense. Dinershteyn brought this phony argument up because he has nothing else to support his point of view. Neither on the board, nor in the rules. If we start discussing intentions in cases like this, we exactly produce the kind of meta-gaming and bad blood it is supposed to prevent. (Imagine, e.g. a go server would allow to resume a game only, when the connection breakdown was not intentional to gain time. A lot of trouble, but very hard to prove either = bad rule.) Generally, regulating problems that don't exist isn't helpful.topazg wrote:I agree with this, it appears there is some need for tightening up of the rules, or more explicit about the implications of the existing rules. The fact that players can do this implies to me that something hasn't been thought through well enough.Horibe wrote:So a player in his last few seconds of byo yomi can INTENTIONALLY make and illegal move and call for a tournament director for a ruling, all the while staring at the board to make sure of something.
...
Putting aside this game's result, I think taking an appeal of this ruling was a good thing - the EGF needs to be sure of its implications.
I really do not think I am being a "drama queen". I think there is a real issue (not necessarily the particular game, but the rule) and question whether name calling is productive.Vesa wrote:I guess the most important part of the drama is that whenever you need the rules applied in non-trivial cases many drama queens want to have the rules changed immediately because of that.
Cheers,
Vesa
Seems to be an (US)-American problem, never happened to me (and in fact I never heard about it) once in European tournamentsHoribe wrote: However their is a substantial minority who will simply call for a TD and stare at the board until someone else does the counting and adjusting. This can give them 5 minutes easily the first time, and a couple minutes as the periods go by. These are honorable guys, if you suggested they were cheating they would be shocked - they are doing nothing wrong. Sure, they are fully aware that other players to not take this advantage, but they are doing nothing wrong.