Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
On the face of it, it looks like Bill tried to change his mind when he wasn’t allowed to.
Mark
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
On the face of it, it looks like Bill tried to change his mind when he wasn’t allowed to.
Mark
Is he not allowed to change his mind?
Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
On the face of it, it looks like Bill tried to change his mind when he wasn’t allowed to.
Mark
Is he not allowed to change his mind?
Yep - whenever a decision is required in Magic, there is a point where it is too late to change your mind. And for me, Bill was passed that point. He had time to think, and then time to change his mind. We're passed those points.
Originally posted by Eric Slater:
Event is a modern Grand Prix. Round one of the event. Players are Abe on Grixis control and Bill on Lantern.
Abe activates Liliana of the Veil, Bill says “Ok”, Thinks for a moment and separates a card from his hand, holding it in front of his graveyard. Abe makes his selection, moves toward grave, pauses, and drops his card(lightning bolt) in the bin. Bill sees the card and quickly switches what card he is discarding. Words got alittle heated and judge was called.
Just wondering what everyones take on this is? I was not the judge for the event, merely a bi-standard, and the floor judge ruled no penalty.
Originally posted by Eric Slater:
Event is a modern Grand Prix. Round one of the event. Players are Abe on Grixis control and Bill on Lantern.
Abe activates Liliana of the Veil, Bill says “Ok”, Thinks for a moment and separates a card from his hand, holding it in front of his graveyard. Abe makes his selection, moves toward grave, pauses, and drops his card(lightning bolt) in the bin. Bill sees the card and quickly switches what card he is discarding. Words got alittle heated and judge was called.
Just wondering what everyones take on this is? I was not the judge for the event, merely a bi-standard, and the floor judge ruled no penalty.
Edited Francesco Scialpi (May 22, 2019 11:19:39 AM)
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:Originally posted by Eric Slater:
Event is a modern Grand Prix. Round one of the event. Players are Abe on Grixis control and Bill on Lantern.
Abe activates Liliana of the Veil, Bill says “Ok”, Thinks for a moment and separates a card from his hand, holding it in front of his graveyard. Abe makes his selection, moves toward grave, pauses, and drops his card(lightning bolt) in the bin. Bill sees the card and quickly switches what card he is discarding. Words got alittle heated and judge was called.
Just wondering what everyones take on this is? I was not the judge for the event, merely a bi-standard, and the floor judge ruled no penalty.
So, no fix? Bill got away with changing his choice after seeing the card that Abe was discarding?
Even if we assess no cheating, that seems unfair to me.
Originally posted by Eric Slater:This seems much more relevant than the Lightning Bolt that was discarded, although what card they didn't discard could be relevant to decision-making. However, that AP chose their card to discard and showed it also isn't an automatic lock-in here. What's relevant is whether NAP made it clear that they had made a choice. Separating a card and holding it in front of the graveyard could be a way to indicate this. But were they holding it face down or vertical with the card face facing them? The former seems much more definitive as a physical indication of a choice. The latter could be them leaning towards choosing the card but still thinking. Did NAP start to show the card, see the Lightning Bolt, then pull it back?
Bill was choosing between academy ruins and mox opal, both of which had another in play. Started at first to discard the ruins, then chose to switch to mox opal. Maybe because Abe had a fulminator mage in play.
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