Edited Lyle Waldman (June 16, 2017 09:52:58 PM)
Edited Lyle Waldman (June 16, 2017 11:01:57 PM)
Edited David Rockwood (June 18, 2017 07:15:41 PM)
After sideboard I normally check if the configuration is the optimal one for the match (make sure there are not undesired cards), while I am looking through and checking I am also moving my lands to separate them. Once I am done looking, I will carry on shuffling.
Edited Johannes Wagner (June 18, 2017 07:36:39 PM)
Originally posted by David Rockwood:
I would like to make a point that a deck check (or thumbing through the deck at any point) isn't something that should be considered as “evidence” of deck stacking. If the “best” draws are on top of his deck, that doesn't really matter. They could have made it there through legal randomization or through cheating. The final result isn't evidence of how the cards got there.
Originally posted by Johannes Wagner:and that's where we disagree.
The similarities are obvious
Originally posted by IPG:Lyle's scenario is about the “manipulation, weaving, or stacking prior to {shuffling}”; the scenario you wish to label as similar is a DQ based on an investigation of shuffling techniques.
A deck is not shuffled if the judge believes a player could know the position or distribution of one or more cards in his or her deck.
-and-
Any manipulation, weaving, or stacking prior to randomization is acceptable, as long as the deck is thoroughly shuffled afterwards.
Originally posted by Johannes Wagner:Absolutely - a very valid concern.
Lyle's player could go on to risk a DQ if another judge sees it and believes he's cheating
Originally posted by IPG, repeated:Again, that's the key part I'm trying to communicate to everyone reading this thread - we don't care what you do (quickly) before you shuffle, we care that you shuffle sufficiently. In the case of the DQ, the determination was that the shuffling was not sufficient. And, in a couple DQs I've handled, the shuffling was the means of manipulating the deck.
Any manipulation, weaving, or stacking prior to randomization is acceptable, as long as the deck is thoroughly shuffled afterwards.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
The player believes that this technique meaningfully improves his draws, and based on his results in events and having played against him and watched him play against others, I am inclined to believe him. However, at the moment I have no proof that he is stacking his deck in any formal or meaningful way.
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