It depends slightly on if it is A or N's hand that we've destroyed.
If it is A's then we give him a new seven and give him the option to
muligan. If he keeps then start the game, if he muligans then we have
to give B the choice to muligan now that his opponent has muliganed.
If it is B's then it is simpler, we give him a new seven and he can
muligan. Regardless A can't muligan.
On Thu, Apr 18, 2013 at 2:54 PM, Trey Cizek
<
forum-3859@apps.magicjudges.org> wrote:
> The issue I have with allowing the person whose hand we didn't lose a chance
> to keep (and yes, I maintain that it should be a forced mull to 7 for both),
> is that you're essentially allowing that player to get a free mulligan to
> seven at his discretion - instead of seeing the current hand and choosing to
> keep or mulligan to six as per normal procedure, that player is now getting
> to see his current hand and either keep or mulligan back to six, essentially
> allowing him to throw back any hand that is worse than the average seven yet
> better than the average six, which really isn't fair to that player's
> opponent and opens the door for all sorts of cans of worms.
>
> I think the only two options that can be considered here are either to force
> player B to his decision to keep the 7, or force him to do a mull to 7,
> after which he may mulligan along with his opponent in the fashion
> prescribed by policy, and for the reasons I stated above, I do not feel
> letting him keep his seven i s wise.
>
> I don't think the “back up to mulligans” is a complete fix either. Assume
> the player whose opening hand we lost is n the play for game 1. Player A now
> knows that his opponent has a hand which is at least marginal, giving him
> strategic information about the relative strength of his opponent's hand
> that he would not otherwise have access to had we not been in this
> situation.
>
> Again, I stress that since this is in the realm of irreparable damage to the
> game state (we can't go back and recreate the opening hand) and therefore a
> deviation is warranted here, the head judge or his designate (I don't know
> if team leads are given the right of deviation at a GP - someone with GP
> experience want to help me out?) should be notified and must sign off on any
> decision we consider.
>
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Gareth Pye
Level 2 Judge, Melbourne, Australia
Australian MTG Forum:
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