Edited Konrad Eibl (Jan. 18, 2016 07:42:10 PM)
Originally posted by Dan Collins:I'm curious about this. Do you really think that player A's implication is strong enough to DQ?
So both players
Originally posted by Dan Collins:
and we shouldn't anyway as it may be an active investigation
Originally posted by José Moreira:
What is the diference between this case and id for 1/2nd?
Originally posted by Joaquín Ossandón:Remember, in the original scenario the judge was right behind them. Do you step in immediately and DQ B, or would you hang out and listen for another 30 seconds to give A enough rope to hang himself?
I'm not sure about player A, but still, if he doesn't call a judge inmediatly I would apply a DQ to him too, as per MTR 5.2.
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:I'd be much happier if we could step in before B uses enough of his rope, and save them both.
or would you hang out and listen for another 30 seconds to give A enough rope to hang himself?
Originally posted by Jan Gräfen:This is a little different from the rest of the examples. As long as no other player is in earshot, there's no way to interpret a question towards a judge as offering a player incentive to change a match result. A player could tell me he came to a PPTQ with $100 cash planning to buy his way to the invite; so long as he tells me in private, and so long as he has not yet made this offer to any other players, I would not issue a penalty (though obviously, I'd make it clear that his plan was completely unacceptable and watch him carefully during the rest of the event)
Also consider this: If a player walks up to you and tells you that he considers offering his opponent a prize-split in exchange for a result during the next round, what would you do?
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