Edited Espen Skarsbø Olsen (March 11, 2015 02:03:07 PM)
Originally posted by Richard Drijvers:
*Players are allowed to share prizes they have not yet received in the
current tournament as they wish and may agree as such before or during
their match, as long as any such sharing does not occur in exchange for any
game or match result or the dropping of a player from the tournament.
Originally posted by Richard Drijvers:
As an exception, players in the announced last round of the single-elimination portion of a tournament may agree to divide tournament prizes as they wish. In that case, one of the players at each table must agree to drop from the tournament. Players are then awarded prizes according to their resulting ranking. *
Edited James Winward-Stuart (March 11, 2015 02:34:40 PM)
Originally posted by George FitzGerald:
The way that I read it is that you cannot connect the two. You cannot make
one dependent upon the other happening.
Originally posted by Bryan Li:
I think that the first three are definitely okay, and the last one is weird and very context dependent. Prizes are always going to be connected to the concession, by nature of what a concession is. All the first three examples are doing are providing facts about the event's prize structure. The prize structure will obviously influence the decision to concede/split - why would it be illegal to talk about the prize structure? The definition of Bribery in the MTR specifies that the reward/incentive has to be offered by one player for it to be Bribery, and nothing is being offered; the prize split has already been agreed on and is 50/50, and there are no other offers being made. The only thing is happening is that the opponent is trying to produce a win-win situation by maximizing both the opponent's prize payout and his own place in the event, and I don't see how that's illegal.