This should be determined solely by what is written on the decklist, and not based on intent or the actual
contents of the deck; needing to check the deck for confirmation is a sign that the entry is not obvious.
Edited Benjamin Harris (Sept. 25, 2015 11:03:21 AM)
Originally posted by Riki Hayashi:
I also like to expand my thinking in situations like this. What if the player got Thoughtseized and the opponent saw the unmarked checklist card. She calls for a judge, then what? Do we confirm that there are only Jace's in the box and everything is hunky dory, thus giving away some information about the content of the player's deck (no other PWs)?
Edited Tom Davis (Sept. 25, 2015 11:19:05 AM)
Originally posted by Patrick Vorbroker:
Welcome back to the Knowledge Pool everyone! This week we have another Gold Scenario for you, meaning all judges are welcome to participate from the get-go
The blog post for this scenario can be found here.
At the beginning of round three at a standard Grand Prix Trial, you deck check table 5. Elspeth's decklist says “4 Jace, Vryn's Prodigy”, along with a variety of other blue and black spells and lands. Her deck, however, contains 56 cards and 4 unmarked Magic Origins Checklist Cards. Her box also contains 4 Jace, Vryn's Prodigy in clear sleeves. There are no other cards which can be represented by a checklist card on Elspeth's decklist or in her deck. What do you do?
Originally posted by Marcos Sanchez:
Any opponent playing against this player has no way to verify whether the Checklist card is designated to be Jace or Liliana - either one can legally be played in this deck, and there's no way for either player to verify the legality of the checklist card being a legal proxy for either Jace or Liliana without knowing the entirety of the deck.
Originally posted by Jonathan Burgess:
Sean, I would argue that this falls under clerical error as they had the card listed on their decklist, had the card in their deckbox with the exact amount of checklist cards and no other cards in their deck/deckbox that the checklist card could apply to, the were merely not marked which might have been as simple as a friend suggested they do this right before the tournament to preserve their cards by not taking them out of the sleeves repeatedly, a common occurrence.
On the same note I also believe it would be difficult to gain an advantage in the tournament from the situation.
Edited Jarrett Boutilier (Sept. 28, 2015 07:44:52 PM)
Originally posted by Talin Salway:
This certainly is a tricky one. Either Elspeth has committed TE - D/DLP, or Elspeth has committed no infraction.
MTR 3.5 states “Each individual checklist card used must have one (and only one) of the items checked.”, which is not the case here. However, there's not a generic “broke a tournament rule” infraction, and there's no infraction that directly references MTR 3.5.
If a player violates the MTR in a way that is not covered by one of the infractions below, the judge should explain the appropriate procedure to the player, but not issue a penalty. Continued disregard of these rules may require further investigation.
Edited Alexandra Yang (Sept. 29, 2015 12:36:39 AM)
Originally posted by IPG:
If a player, before taking any game actions, discovers a deck (not decklist) problem and calls a judge at that point, the Head Judge may issue a Warning, fix the deck, and, if the player has drawn their opening hand, instruct the player to mulligan. The player may continue to take further mulligans if he or she desires.
Originally posted by IPG:
The Head Judge may choose to not issue this penalty if they believe that what the player wrote on their decklist is obvious and unambiguous, even if it is not the full, accurate name of the card
Originally posted by IPG:
Remove any cards from the deck that are illegal for the format or violate the maximum number allowed, fix any failures to de-sideboard, restore any missing cards if they (or identical replacements) can be located, then alter the decklist to reflect the remaining deck.
Edited Marc Shotter (Sept. 29, 2015 05:46:03 AM)