If the player, upon drawing an opening hand, discovers a deck problem and calls a judge at that point, the Head Judge may downgrade the penalty, fix the deck, and allow the player to redraw the hand with one fewer card. The player may continue to take further mulligans if he or she desires.
Edited Piotr Łopaciuk (Nov. 27, 2013 06:49:11 AM)
Originally posted by Julien de Graat:Well, you're 100% right, I missed that. Therefore it is possible to downgrade penalty for Chris.
The Comprehensive Rules define opening hand as the cards that you keep after all mulligan decisions (CR 103.4). So I think Chris actually did discover the error in time for the downgrade.
The Head Judge may issue a Warning instead of a Game Loss and have Chris draw one fewer card in his next hand (i.e. 5).
If the player, upon drawing an opening hand, discovers a deck problem and calls a judge at that point, the Head Judge may downgrade the penalty, fix the deck, and allow the player to redraw the hand with one fewer card. The player may continue to take further mulligans if he or she desires.I would say that the player should draw 5 cards.
Edited Nicholas Brown (Nov. 27, 2013 07:14:38 AM)
Originally posted by Nicholas Brown:
I would say that the player should draw 5 cards.
Originally posted by Stefano Ferrari:I read downgrading, fixing the deck and redrawing with one fewer card all as one package. You either apply all of it or none.
In all honesty, I would have Chris draw 6 cards after fixing and reshuffling his deck.
Could you please convince me with your 5s? :)
Originally posted by John McCarthy:
Pretty much agree with what's been said re: violation and penalty, including downgrade for Chris.
I ask Chris to make sure he gets a real shuffle in after pile counting, then go to five - when he tossed his hand back, he'd already chosen to go to six, so if we let him draw six, we're allowing him to get a free mulligan.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
Question: In this scenario, Paul started his game with a 61 card deck, rather than 60, which we consider a disadvantage philosophically as per the M14 sideboarding rules. He had not drawn Chris' card, so by getting Chris' card from Paul you (as a judge) did not break Paul's game state. Assuming Chris' card was not also in Paul's deck (i.e. Paul wasn't playing any copies of the card Chris had accidentally given him, so we can verify that Paul had not gained advantage off of Chris' card) and we can verify that Chris and Paul were not collaborating in cheating by doing this, can we downgrade the GL for Paul to a Warning and allow him to continue playing his game? Assuming the above things are true, I see no reason why it is necessary to break Paul's game state over this problem.
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