Originally posted by Darren Horve:
I'm with Adam. Hold ground. He's being an ass. What we in the ‘ business ’ like to call : Punking you. Manage a straight face and ask him to hold his game while you go get him a piece of paper in order to complete the DQ paperwork.
He'll probably change his tune pretty quick. And once he does, let him know that it's not a joke-able topic. He will be les likely to get snarky to another judge in the future.
Edited Peter Richmond (Feb. 24, 2015 11:40:05 AM)
Edited Matthew Light (Feb. 24, 2015 12:12:11 PM)
Originally posted by Peter Richmond:
While I understand the sentiment, please refrain from this particular type of behavior (specifically the punking part). Firmly get an acceptable answer, and let him know that those kinds of comments and behaviors are unacceptable. Threatening to go straight for a DQ (assuming you are a Head Judge, please do NOT do this as a floor judge) is significantly detrimental to the kind of diplomacy and tact we wish to bring to this situation, and may end up simply escalating an inappropriate demeanor to a full-blown argument and, perhaps, a needed investigation for something the judge himself or herself provoked.
Originally posted by Gareth Pye:
While there are many wrong ways to react there is also many correct
ways. Many of those correct ways rely on the judge being able to
deliver them correctly. They also depend on the player you are
interacting with and the cultural norms that are applicable. Mine
would probably work pretty well in most of Australia as it would be
tieing into (not exclusively) our distrust of The Man and his mindless
rules. It's also a response that I'd be able to deliver appropriately,
but I'd probably deliver Evan's with a bit too much aggression to be
100% effective.
Scott Marshall
I think it's important to imagine Evan stating his suggested reply in a very calm, non-confrontational tone of voice. How it's said may well be far more important than what's said.
Edited Evan Cherry (Feb. 24, 2015 04:06:15 PM)
Originally posted by Sam Sherman:While there's no infraction, it is still behaviour we can't tolerate on tournaments. Some nearby players could not get sarcasm from that guy and gain false assumption from that situation, that we will tolerate some kind of cheating. I would talk to the player, telling him that cheating is no laughing matter for us.
To me this is a very clear no infraction, no penalty, move on with your life.
Edited Bartłomiej Wieszok (Feb. 25, 2015 05:33:32 AM)
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