Edited Andrew Keeler (Jan. 30, 2017 07:23:34 AM)
Originally posted by Julio Sosa:
MTR2.6 says that “If a judge pauses a match for more than one minute while the round clock is running, he or she should extend the match time appropriately.” It is so because all players should have a full 50-minute round. If there were 2 minutes before time was called, even though the call would have taken more than that, the time extension should cover the time the judge used while the round clock was running.
Originally posted by Julio Sosa:Once the round clock stops running, the extension stops growing.
MTR2.6 says that "If a judge pauses a match for more than one minute while the round clock is running, he or she should extend the match time appropriately."
Originally posted by Seth Black:
If, perhaps, the call starts at 47 minutes into the round, and takes 5 minutes, but the table already has a 5 minute extension from an earlier situation, how long of a time extension do you give?
Originally posted by Kyle Gorbski:I'm confused - how does 47 minutes of playtime plus 3 minutes of extension mean a 48 minute round?
If we give a time extension of only 3 minutes, how much was remaining on the clock, that would mean they have had a 48 minute round.
Originally posted by Rob Marti:Originally posted by Kyle Gorbski:I'm confused - how does 47 minutes of playtime plus 3 minutes of extension mean a 48 minute round?
If we give a time extension of only 3 minutes, how much was remaining on the clock, that would mean they have had a 48 minute round.
Edited Rebecca Lawrence (Feb. 2, 2017 04:54:49 PM)
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