Originally posted by Shawn Doherty:
There is nothing “scummy” here. The active player stated a simple shortcut, indicating that he wanted to move to combat. There wasn't any tricky wordplay meant to confuse the opponent. It is up to Nelson to clearly state when he's playing the spell. If he doesn't then we simply apply the shortcut as indicated by policy. The active player was correct to point out that the trigger was already on the stack, based on how policy handles this. Nelson realizing that he played his spell at the “wrong” time isn't him indicating that he's interrupting the shortcut.
This is why I would ask NAP about their intention, though. I find it hard to believe that they acted at the “wrong” time if they called a judge as soon as the token is put into play.
To be clear, I'm not disagreeing that NAP
should have specifically stated that they were acting during the Precombat Main Phase. I just disagree that they're trying to fix a misplay if they're immediately calling a judge because they thought they reacted in time.
I'm willing to be wrong, and this may be a lesson for Nelson going forward. But since I've always been taught to ask the players why they did what they did, I feel like we have a good shot at clarifying whether Nelson got it wrong or there was simply a confusion over what step they acted in.