Originally posted by Isaac King:
Even at FNM, Norris needs to say something if he wants to respond. I have a hard time believing that Alesha managed to put several cards on the bottom of her deck before Norris had a chance to say “wait, I want to do something”. This is a “you had to be there” situation, but it seems to be that Norris has passed priority and let the trigger and the spell resolve.
From reading the scenario my gut instinct was screaming that Alesha was hasty, not that Norris was slow here. Your response seems based a lot on the time that has elapsed between the moment the miracle trigger is announced and the moment Norris mentions having a response. Especially at regular, where people might not be as familiar with the cards and interactions and play patterns aren't as ingrained, elapsed time does not strike me as the best indicator of where in the turn we are. Time can sure be collateral evidence, but I'd look for other indicators first.
I'd look for any indicator that Norris has passed priority past the miracle trigger. Has Norris started picking up his own creatures before realizing he had an alternative option? Has Norris verbally indicated that the miracle (or the miracle trigger) can resolve? Has Norris been reading Terminus and Vendilion Clique while Alesha put away her creatures, or has Norris been nodding on in approval as the creatures were moved?
I don't see anything in this scenario that indicates Norris actively passing past the point he wanted to act, what I do see is a player saying they wanted to act and feeling like they didn't get that chance.
I like both fixed proposed in this topic by Jarrett and Mark. Jarrett's fix looks to be a bit more exact where Mark's fix is a bit more improvisational. Since it's regular I'd want to get these people back to playing magic again asap and I'd go with Mark's fix which I think is quicker to execute.