barmar, on Aug 14 2006, 10:04 AM, said:
Walddk, on Aug 12 2006, 07:40 PM, said:
jillybean2, on Aug 12 2006, 11:42 PM, said:
Unless the player is red dot or disconnected I think all pauses online must be regarded as hesitation.
I am not so sure. Phone ringing, urgent visit to the toilet, answer the door, etc. There are many ways hesitations occur where the "offender" doesn't even have time to type "brb".
While that's true in general, in this case the opponent specifically claimed "connection issues". If his connection was supposedly stuck for several minutes, yet he never got a red dot, I think a little suspicion may be justified.
Perhaps a bit of a tangent, but is answering the phone, answering the door, or going to the bathroom usually (under all but the most unusual/unpleasant circumstances
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) something one has to do so quickly that one can't type e.g. "brb phone"?
[I'm leaving aside for now, and for another discussion sometime, the issue of whether one should join a tournament unless one can devote the time to it, I'm assuming a tournament in which the TD is okay with this behaviour and there's enough time (e.g. unclocked).]
Except in case of e.g. fire or spilling a drink on the keyboard or carpet (have to mop up quickly) etc. I can think of very few circumstances in which one has to so urgently do something that one can't wait a few seconds to type a "brb" message. It takes what, all of 5 seconds? Say you're a really slow typist, 15 seconds. Is that so hard? Is the person at the door to tell you you've won a million dollars going to leave because you're not leaping over furniture to answer it and it takes you 40 seconds to answer the door instead of 30?
Obviously, TDs can set their own rules, but this alleged excuse ("I couldn't type brb because the phone rang"
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) seems ridiculous to me.