Edited John Eriksson (Jan. 29, 2014 09:25:40 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
Easy:
You are at the last Table of the last Round of Swiss, which had x minutes extratime, obviously a big crowd has gathered around that table. Player Arnold offers a diceroll in front of your eyes. You Snap-DQ Arnold for IDAW. After giving the DQ and taking the result entry slip, Adam pokes you on the shoulder and says:
'He can't do that? My opponent offered me a diceroll after game 2 since we only had 5 minutes left and played the UW-mirror.'
Obvious questions: ‘Who was your opponent?’ - ‘Norbert Norrington was his name I think - we played at table 8’ - ‘Why didn’t you call a Judge?' - ‘I didn’t know it was illegal' - ‘Why do you come to me now?’ - ‘I saw you DQing that guy for offering to roll a die, and thought I’d better tell you my opponent did too' - ‘What do you hope/think will happen now’ - ‘I don’t know, I just want to do the right thing'.
To Norbert: ‘What happened during your last Round?’ - ‘I played against Adam Adamson, UW Mirror, we played 1-1-1, why do you ask?’ - ‘What happened after the second game?’ - ‘I shuffled for Game 3’ - ‘How much time was there left’ - ‘About 5 minutes I think’ - ‘Did you offer a diceroll?’ - ‘What? No, of course not, thats not allowed’
Further questions lead to the same answers.
Does either lie to you to get his opponent DQed/not get DQed? Well, yes of course. But which one?
Yes, there might be tells that push me to believing he lies/tells the truth…but what if that isn't the case? What if I feel it's a complete 50/50-decision, if I were to make one?
What do I write into the DQ-report? - ‘Adam told me this, Norman told me that, I didnt know if Adam was guilty of IDAW or Lying to me, so I rolled a 6-sided die and for even numbers, I DQ both for IDAW, for odd numbers, I DQ Adam for Lying. The dice landed on 4, so here is your DQ for IDAW. I still don’t believe that's what happened, but I don't believe Adam lied either, and this thread on Judgeapps told me to DQ at least one'?
EDIT: To clarify - I believe in the assumption of innocence, and if I, as a Judge, can't discard that assumption for either option - even if the options are mutually exclusive - I don't believe I should DQ someone just because ‘someone has to be DQed, so…Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, the DQed one will be you.’
I just don't see how that fits our goal of giving good customer service…at all.
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:
However, “I can't decide what's wrong, so everything's fine by default” isn't really a good outcome.
Originally posted by Philip Körte:- while that is a consideration when it comes to Game Rule Violations (committed intentionally, for advantage), it is not acceptable for Bribery, Wagering, or Improperly Determining a Winner.
‘I didn’t know it was illegal'
Originally posted by Adam Kolipiński:
I think that there shouldn't never occur a 50/50 finished investigation. There is always a way to do it 51/49, and then you should make action based on scenario you think is most probable.
Originally posted by Darren Horve:Look to your Head Judge for guidance; generally speaking, a Floor Judge should determine that something is fishy, send a colleague to go get the Head Judge, then let the HJ guide the process. A judge should stay at the match, so the players aren't able to collaborate on a story before the HJ starts an investigation.
how dedicated to this one issue should a judge get? (I will be judging my first BIG event in Feb.)
Edited Darren Horve (Jan. 29, 2014 01:43:06 PM)