Originally posted by James Dowling:
I feel I disagree here. AP has been clear in his intentions here (especially assuming he can tell you what he wants to do in BOC), and taking the opportunity to make the optimal play away from him EVEN WHEN he has made all the correct moves to do what he would like to do, because of a tournament shortcut that he is trying to avoid, seems really silly.
The statement he has made, by the book, does what he wants it to do. Why do we take that away from him?
Originally posted by James Dowling:
I feel I disagree here. AP has been clear in his intentions here (especially assuming he can tell you what he wants to do in BOC), and taking the opportunity to make the optimal play away from him EVEN WHEN he has made all the correct moves to do what he would like to do, because of a tournament shortcut that he is trying to avoid, seems really silly.
The statement he has made, by the book, does what he wants it to do. Why do we take that away from him?
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:
Nothing about Player A saying “I wish to enter my beginning of combat step” is about Player A making any kind of “optimal play”. In fact, Player A isn't making any kind of play at all via the use of that phrase.
Edited Toby Hazes (Jan. 2, 2015 09:41:27 AM)
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:Then why do we constantly ignore them, especially in the situation of “cast burning wish… crack LED” to mean that he's retaining priority, when the MTR says you must explicitly state you're holding priority? We ignore MTR rules all the time when we feel it's correct.
The shortcuts in the MTR are there for a very good reason, please don't ignore them.
Originally posted by Olivier Jansen:
Then why do we constantly ignore them, especially in the situation of “cast burning wish… crack LED” to mean that he's retaining priority, when the MTR says you must explicitly state you're holding priority? We ignore MTR rules all the time when we feel it's correct.
Originally posted by Aaron Henner:
Perhaps it would be helpful if we discuss what statements from AP would result in us ruling in their favor?
Edited Nicola DiPasquale (Jan. 2, 2015 02:32:09 PM)
Originally posted by Aaron Henner:I think the simplest answer is just “There is no way to trick your opponent like that.” This is sort of like the situation where you may have to give away the existence of a trigger to discover if it has been missed. While it's not the most perfectly ideal solution, it's far better than the alternative.
Should I have instead said “There's no way. Tournament policy forbids that completely-legal-by-CR play”?
….
I am struggling at the next step though.
Originally posted by Aaron Henner:When players ask what they need to say in order to avoid the shortcut, what they're really asking is “What secret combination of words can I use to legally trick my opponent into doing things in my main phase when they meant to act in beginning of combat?” And our answer to that question should absolutely be “There is none. You cannot trick your opponent like that.”
I have, a few times in my judging career, had the following happen:
I take a call where AP said “Combat Phase”, NAP did something, AP wants to play a haste creature. I've said AP couldn't, explained the shortcut, explained some of the reasoning behind why the tournament policy is as it is. AP then asks me what they can say to achieve this. My answer has usually included “you have to be SUPER-explicit”.
Should I have instead said “There's no way. Tournament policy forbids that completely-legal-by-CR play”?