Originally posted by Scott Marshall:So, I think part of the confusion has to do with the meaning of “not an infraction.”
Yes, we prefer that they notify a judge if they saw something suspicious - but what's the threshold for that? what if you just heard from others “don't trust that guy's shuffles!”, and you want to be safe? what if you caught a glimpse of something, but can't describe it - and thus can't expect a judge to detect anything by looking at the deck? There's just so many reasons why we chose to remove that example, and - at that time - make it clear that this is not an infraction, much less a DQ.
But performing an otherwise legal action - i.e., the 3-pile shuffle - doesn't become illegal because of what you suspect (or even know) your opponent did while shuffling.When the (then) L4s & L5s discussed this, that was the sticking point - we can't DQ someone for a legal action, just because they *might* have actually seen what they only *think* they saw. (And good luck proving guilt in those situations, anyway!)
A cut is moving any one section of the deck to either the top or bottom of the rest of the deck; any other changes to the order of the deck is considered a shuffle.So that included moving the middle third out of the deck, and putting it on top or bottom - but if you just put the top and bottom cards in the deck somewhere else, that counted as a shuffle. Not very specific, and falls well short of the concept of sufficient shuffling.
Edited Scott Marshall (May 31, 2016 12:22:39 PM)
Originally posted by MTR 3.9:Dominik, which infraction applies if a player doesn't comply with that rule, from the MTR? (hint: there isn't one, because that's not an infraction)
If the opponent does not believe the player made a reasonable effort to randomize his or her deck, the opponent must notify a judge.
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