If their lack of trust in the judge costs them 3 minutes of their match time to make sure and shuffle, that is their choice. I'm just not going to give them an extension for it.
Now the questions rises, why would a judge tell me not to shuffle after a deck check?
Originally posted by Olivier Jansen:Ah, yes, good point! So, there really isn't an infraction that's a *good* match; we can assess Unsporting Conduct - Minor (“fails to follow the request of a tournament official”), but that may seem petty, even draconian, to the player.
I was under the impression that GPE's occurred during games, TE's were a result of making a mistake with tournament rules and procedures, etc. Given that they're getting ready for a game, and not actually in a game, how can a GPE be given without a game to go along with it?
Originally posted by Pascal Gemis:
Because it's what we do when we use the Polish method to deck check as the deck is in the exact same order before and after deck check. This method save 3 min (the time extension given to player to shuffle thoroughly) in each deck check.
Originally posted by Marc DeArmond:
If their lack of trust in the judge costs them 3 minutes of their match time to make sure and shuffle, that is their choice. I'm just not going to give them an extension for it.
Originally posted by Jason Daniels:
I fully intend on trying this method in the near future. When I get back
to the table, I was planning on asking the players to quickly count their
decks and then shuffle and present like they just fetched a fetch land (a
few quick riffles, 10-15 secs). As players get more used to the process,
then they'll understand what's going on and be much more receptive and they
may be more comfortable with not shuffling. We still are giving a shorter
extension for count and shuffle (maybe adding 1 minute instead of adding 3
minutes) and getting things moving faster.
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:
Except pile “shuffling” isn't a valid form of shuffling
Originally posted by Sandro Carlucci:because the deck is not random if one card is known and the known card is still known after 1 or a million pile counts.
True, but if the deck is randomized anyway if it gets back whats the harm?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Originally posted by Olivier Jansen:
I was under the impression that GPE's occurred during games, TE's were a result of making a mistake with tournament rules and procedures, etc. Given that they're getting ready for a game, and not actually in a game, how can a GPE be given without a game to go along with it?
Ah, yes, good point! So, there really isn't an infraction that's a *good* match; we can assess Unsporting Conduct - Minor (“fails to follow the request of a tournament official”), but that may seem petty, even draconian, to the player.
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:
because the deck is not random if one card is known and the known card is still known after 1 or a million pile counts.
If I have a 60 card deck and I know the last card is X and I do a 7 pile count the topmost card on pile 4 will always be card X and depending on my willingness to have it sooner or later I can position it in my deck to be more or less likly on the top or bottom after the cut by my opponent.
You can read more about pile counting here http://fivewithflores.com/2009/05/how-to-cheat/