Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:Quite contrary, AP is under no obligation to assign leftover damages to player. He can assign more that lethal damages to blocking creature. It might because he forget about trample, but it might be because of tactical reasons. If AP say nothing in damage steps I would assume that he know about trample and choose not to assign additional damage and “overkill” blocking creature.
Then A would have told N to take two damage instead of one. I do not see the relevance here.
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:I'm saying that I don't see GRV there. I would intervene if that Wolf creature would not be blocked. Then, if player is missing one damage, its clearly GRV. Same, if 2/2 would be blocked with 3/3 and blocker would not die in combat, then its GRV as well. 2/2 blocked with 2/2 and with no damages assigned to a player are for me just AP choise not to trample that one additional damage.
I do not understand what you are trying to tell me here.
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:Yes, but what static ability it is matter. Trample is specific, because player might “miss” it because how rules for assigning damages work and I don't we should go there with “how players usually play”. If there would be lifelink or deathtouch involved then yes, you should intervene, and I would not issue OA if this would be spotted by a spectator, but still I would tell him how to bring that kind of errors to our attention.
“You should have dealt 1 damage because of this static ability” Can by my definition never be OA because it is something that N should tell A otherwise we would investigate N for cheating. I know that the trample makes it awkward because we expect players to know that they can overkill the blocking creature but that is not how the players usually play the game.
Also no one is taking into account that these were two players/friends from another region who travelled to the tournament. Makes me harder to believe that it was an honest mistake.Then this should go not only with OA but additional investigation.
Edited Bartłomiej Wieszok (June 29, 2016 08:57:31 AM)
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:
“You should have dealt 1 damage because of this static ability” Can by my definition never be OA because it is something that N should tell A otherwise we would investigate N for cheating. I know that the trample makes it awkward because we expect players to know that they can overkill the blocking creature but that is not how the players usually play the game.
Originally posted by Mark Litvak:
Also no one is taking into account that these were two players/friends from another region who travelled to the tournament. Makes me harder to believe that it was an honest mistake.
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:
I think you damage tournament integrity in general if you punish me now by effectively DQ'ing me (yes, a Match Loss right before start of Top 8 in which I would play, that's effectively the same as a DQ
Originally posted by Milan Majerčík:
Hello,Mark Litvak
Also no one is taking into account that these were two players/friends from another region who travelled to the tournament. Makes me harder to believe that it was an honest mistake.
Do you think that it was DQ-worthy cheating made by the spectator? Is there anthing else to support your suspicion besides the friendship between the actors (and their intent to go abroad and “rob your tournament”)?
Originally posted by Jeff Phillips:Cool point of view… I think this can be the phylosophical stone of all this.
I don't believe this is OA for one simple reason: The spectator didn't make a strategic recommendation until after the Defending player asked why a judge might need to be called. It sounds like he tried to pause the match, and when the players asked him why, he told them. They then proceeded to resolve the matter on their own in a fair manner.
Originally posted by Jeff Phillips:His answer should be like “I can't tell you, I will explain it to Judge”. I don't find this as a reason why now he can do something, that normally would be OA. It would create a way for providing assistance just by saying “I want you guys to stop, I'm going for a Judge because of XYZ” Especially, that players often misjudge situations and stop the game in situations where I would just roll my eyes (mentally only ;) on how dumb misplay that was but legal.
I don't believe this is OA for one simple reason: The spectator didn't make a strategic recommendation until after the Defending player asked why a judge might need to be called. It sounds like he tried to pause the match, and when the players asked him why, he told them.
we do the only thing possible: default to what actually changed in the gameIf there was a disagreement and I had to resolve it, I would rule that since life totals changed as if no trample was assigned, that's what I we default to. In this case though, it seems as if this minor situation had already been resolved by the players to their mutual satisfaction, so there is little reason to interfere.
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:
He is not allowed to forget the ability. It is not a missed trigger. If he did not say anything about trample we assume he “really wanted to kill the blocker” and that would most probably be my ruling if the spectator had called us instead of talking to the players and this is something I would have told the players after they had fixed the problem by themselves.
Edited Jonas Breindahl (June 30, 2016 05:39:56 PM)
Originally posted by Mats Törnros:That's good question, but I think spectator still should know what he can and what he can't say to the players.
However, there's an important detail in that the spectator did not reveal the actual problem until prompted by the NAP. If giving this information is OA for the spectator, is soliciting it not OA by the NAP?
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:The original scenario didn't mention NAP asking anything. But even if they did, it was probably something like “why do we need a judge?” That's not soliciting OA :)
Jonas, that's exactly what Simon said. ;)Mats TörnrosThat's good question, but I think spectator still should know what he can and what he can't say to the players.
However, there's an important detail in that the spectator did not reveal the actual problem until prompted by the NAP. If giving this information is OA for the spectator, is soliciting it not OA by the NAP?