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ONOG 3K Online Invitational Jan. 28th & Jan. 29th - Page 113

Forum Index > StarCraft 2 Tournaments
2268 CommentsPost a Reply
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syllogism
Profile Joined September 2010
Finland5948 Posts
January 30 2012 18:56 GMT
#2241
On January 31 2012 03:50 rotegirte wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument

It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

This in particular is complete nonsense.


The question raised is exactly how such a rule regarding specifically forfeiting should be formulated. No one is blaming ONOG for handling an uncovered incident, since almost all major tournaments reserve their right to disqualify upon generic exception clauses and general sportsmanship codes. This is what allows them to disqualify players on a whim and handle exotic situations.

The argument is that one side acknowledges the right to forfeit and the other doesn't. The argument is a competitor has no obligation to compete, but an entertainer has. As a competitor I am but only accountable by my personal ambition. As an entertainer providing production value I am accountable towards my team, organizers and fans. There are voices demanding both of the extremes, either full right to forfeit without reasons needed or full refusal of such a right no matter what.

And there are other voices that realize that such extremes are not enforceable, damaging business and/or giving organizers disproportionate amounts of power. It is the question of how much you want one to be a competitor, which includes taking care of personal well-being, and how much of an entertainer providing public value he should be. And what ratio could be healthy to fairly represent both sides of a mutual relationship.


This is a very reasonable position to hold and I do not have any issues with it. Well put
Chessz
Profile Joined August 2010
United States644 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-30 19:05:04
January 30 2012 19:03 GMT
#2242
On January 31 2012 03:50 rotegirte wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument

It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

This in particular is complete nonsense.


The question raised is exactly how such a rule regarding specifically forfeiting should be formulated. No one is blaming ONOG for handling an uncovered incident, since almost all major tournaments reserve their right to disqualify upon generic exception clauses and general sportsmanship codes. This is what allows them to disqualify players on a whim and handle exotic situations.

The argument is that one side acknowledges the right to forfeit and the other doesn't. The argument is a competitor has no obligation to compete, but an entertainer has. As a competitor I am but only accountable by my personal ambition. As an entertainer providing production value I am accountable towards my team, organizers and fans. There are voices demanding both of the extremes, either full right to forfeit without reasons needed or full refusal of such a right no matter what.

And there are other voices that realize that such extremes are not enforceable, damaging business and/or giving organizers disproportionate amounts of power. It is the question of how much you want one to be a competitor, which includes taking care of personal well-being, and how much of an entertainer providing public value he should be. And what ratio could be healthy to fairly represent both sides of a mutual relationship.



Thank you, I think this is one of the most well balanced and rational responses. I think in this circumstance, given the context of the event, funded by barcrafts/community, with live audiences out to bars and establishments, pumped for the best finals imaginable (Kas vs Stephano, violet being out), then I would really expect that at least for this moment, Stephano should feel an obligation as an entertainer to not to what he did. Maybe he doesn't have to ascribe to the extreme end of that paradigm, as you outlined, but I think even playing the finals immediately and casting from replays later wouldve been the best compromise.

But, however much I personally feel that Stephano should feel one way, his ego as a player/competitor is another variable altogether that probably takes priority over any of the above contextual detail, in his own decision making thought processes.
Dandy_Moustachu
Profile Joined July 2010
France422 Posts
January 30 2012 19:03 GMT
#2243
On January 31 2012 03:46 syllogism wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:24 shaberu wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument


That isn't a hypothetical question; it's a straw man.

Incorrect, the purpose is to find out whether you think that the "right" to receive the "earned" prize money comes before all other considerations. The situations are obviously completely different, but the fundamental issue is the same. Further, it relates to the lack of applicable rules.

Show nested quote +
You've previously shown that you're upset with Stephano for going to sleep, yet the only point you disputed is that a tournament should have the right to do basically whatever is in their own interests for whatever reason. You can't just make up the rules as you go along. You've said that this was not an arbitrary decision. How is it not?
["We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500." - ONOG.


Who are they to determine what is appropriate?

It is within the right of every tournament admin to determine what is appropriate and how the rules are interpreted and in addition to determine how situations that haven't been accounted for should be handled. This is true even in real life sports and there are even governing bodies that make these decisions. If the tournaments abuse this right, they should and will be boycotted by players and possibly by viewers. Of course, if the players are not in a position to do so due to market realities and such, this may be a problem but it certainly isn't a problem right now. Finally, it is not an arbitrary it is by definition based on a reasonable argument, whether you disagree with it or not. Arbitrary does not mean the lack of rules.
Show nested quote +
It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

Please, do elaborate. Difficult for whom to trust whom? After having answered that, please provide sources or at least attempt to explain what you base the claim upon


So if GSL decide not to pay any loser of a final who goes 4-0 in the GSL because he doesn't try hard enough, they are right because it's within their right to decide what is appropriate ?
(yeah my exemple is dumb)
Pif Paf Pouf
shaberu
Profile Joined November 2011
Japan21 Posts
January 30 2012 19:10 GMT
#2244
On January 31 2012 03:46 syllogism wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:24 shaberu wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument


That isn't a hypothetical question; it's a straw man.

Incorrect, the purpose is to find out whether you think that the "right" to receive the "earned" prize money comes before all other considerations. The situations are obviously completely different, but the fundamental issue is the same. Further, it relates to the lack of applicable rules.

Show nested quote +
You've previously shown that you're upset with Stephano for going to sleep, yet the only point you disputed is that a tournament should have the right to do basically whatever is in their own interests for whatever reason. You can't just make up the rules as you go along. You've said that this was not an arbitrary decision. How is it not?
["We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500." - ONOG.


Who are they to determine what is appropriate?

It is within the right of every tournament admin to determine what is appropriate and how the rules are interpreted and in addition to determine how situations that haven't been accounted for should be handled. This is true even in real life sports and there are even governing bodies that make these decisions. If the tournaments abuse this right, they should and will be boycotted by players and possibly by viewers. Of course, if the players are not in a position to do so due to market realities and such, this may be a problem but it certainly isn't a problem right now. Finally, it is not an arbitrary it is by definition based on a reasonable argument, whether you disagree with it or not. Arbitrary does not mean the lack of rules.
Show nested quote +
It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

Please, do elaborate. Difficult for whom to trust whom? After having answered that, please provide sources or at least attempt to explain what you base the claim upon


1 - That is, by definition, a straw man.
2 - That is, by definition, arbitary.
3 - Some quickies to start you off, though I'm sure your forum search skills will get you further:
- http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=281161 (Even Idra called out Twitch on late payments).
- http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=283641
- This exact thread, where MrBitter says that they will now force players to sign contracts to avoid this sort of issue.
syllogism
Profile Joined September 2010
Finland5948 Posts
January 30 2012 19:12 GMT
#2245
I did not misinterpret your position and as such it is not a straw man. That is is not arbitrary. Those links do not support your broad assertions. We are back to square one and it appears you do not have the intellectual honesty to discuss the matter, so I am done here.
shaberu
Profile Joined November 2011
Japan21 Posts
January 30 2012 19:12 GMT
#2246
On January 31 2012 04:12 syllogism wrote:
I did not misinterpret your position and as such it is not a straw man. That is is not arbitrary. Those links do not support your broad assertions. We are back to square one and it appears you do not have the intellectual honesty to discuss the matter, so I am done here.


I'm glad, because you haven't disputed any of my points and are patently incorrect.
rotegirte
Profile Joined April 2011
Germany2859 Posts
January 30 2012 19:12 GMT
#2247
On January 31 2012 03:47 BloodThirsty wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:43 Champloo wrote:
I don't even know what this discussion is about. If you forfeit the finals you are second place. Simple as that.


How so? Its their tournament, they don't HAVE to pay you, unless there was a contract that was signed and what I have heard there was none. The tournament has to consider their own integrity for providing entertainment. VIEWERS are what pays for entertainment not a french player who is "le tired" and cant nap during 3rd place match drink energy drinks and try to play the finals. God forbid anyone stays up for a whole night in their life for 1500 dollars.

IF YA DONT WANT TO STAY UP LATE FOR A NA TOURNAMENT DONT PLAY IN IT. Simple as that GG


What the fucking hell. If you meet the requirements of placement, of course you have a right to receive the advertised prize. The difference is, every organizer reserves its right of extraordinary disqualification at their own disclosure. That's what exception clauses are for, to prepare for rare situations. It is then the duty of the organizer to state the reason of exception handling.

In this case, the reasons were:

[...]

If One Nation of Gamers is going to work out and do our part to grow eSports, we have to be an organization that puts the fans first. Given that principle, I came to the decision to penalize Stephano and move him to 4th place, have Catz and Illusion play for 2nd/3rd, and have the victor play against Kas.

Everyone involved with One Nation of Gamers has worked incredibly hard -for months- to raise the $3,000 that we've put up for grabs. It's not a lot to everyone, but it's a lot to us and represents month of volunteer work. We decided to run this tournament to give back to eSports, we wanted to help the pros earn a little more and we wanted to provide some great content to the fans. We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500.

[...]


Which consists of two reasons:

1) Stephano did not put the fans first
2) Stephano did not provide a final series worth 1,500$

No need to interpret, these were the reasons given by the head organizer.

The implications for any future player of ONOG would be:

1) You play for entertainment value first and second for the spirit of competition
2) If we deem your performance not worth a specific, but undefined measure of entertainment value, you can be stripped of your earnings at any given time.

The disrupt occurs in the perceived purpose of a player. Organizers, players and fans are inter-dependent. As much as players rely on events as funding source and public promotion platform, tournaments rely on the players as audience provider. As much as we support them do what they do by our customer dollars, we are dependent on them to exist and willing to provide the entertainment we want.

To say that entertainment value should be prioritized over everything else is debatable.


kojinoob
Profile Joined December 2011
2 Posts
January 30 2012 19:14 GMT
#2248
more drama plz...
Everybody speak about the fact that stephano leave but nobody speak about the game in semi final which were just sad to see (skill lvl).
Stephano was already tired and we could see it during the semi-final, game were boring as justin bieber is !
If he didn't leave 2 things happen :
- Kas is also tired so it would have been a boring final
- Kas is in shape and it would have been a nomatch with a win of Kas.

Stephano leave and we've got a big drama on teamliquid, so i think he is entertaining us a lot even if he didn't play
And so many people talked about the ONOG so the tournament get the visibility they need :p
So Stephano doing the show bb
syllogism
Profile Joined September 2010
Finland5948 Posts
January 30 2012 19:15 GMT
#2249
On January 31 2012 04:12 shaberu wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 04:12 syllogism wrote:
I did not misinterpret your position and as such it is not a straw man. That is is not arbitrary. Those links do not support your broad assertions. We are back to square one and it appears you do not have the intellectual honesty to discuss the matter, so I am done here.


I'm glad, because you haven't disputed any of my points and are patently incorrect.

You've made no points that need to be disputed. You've mainly posted vague opinions on how tournaments ought to operate and how players should be treated.
Chessz
Profile Joined August 2010
United States644 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-30 19:19:22
January 30 2012 19:16 GMT
#2250
On January 31 2012 04:10 shaberu wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:46 syllogism wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:24 shaberu wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument


That isn't a hypothetical question; it's a straw man.

Incorrect, the purpose is to find out whether you think that the "right" to receive the "earned" prize money comes before all other considerations. The situations are obviously completely different, but the fundamental issue is the same. Further, it relates to the lack of applicable rules.

You've previously shown that you're upset with Stephano for going to sleep, yet the only point you disputed is that a tournament should have the right to do basically whatever is in their own interests for whatever reason. You can't just make up the rules as you go along. You've said that this was not an arbitrary decision. How is it not?
["We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500." - ONOG.


Who are they to determine what is appropriate?

It is within the right of every tournament admin to determine what is appropriate and how the rules are interpreted and in addition to determine how situations that haven't been accounted for should be handled. This is true even in real life sports and there are even governing bodies that make these decisions. If the tournaments abuse this right, they should and will be boycotted by players and possibly by viewers. Of course, if the players are not in a position to do so due to market realities and such, this may be a problem but it certainly isn't a problem right now. Finally, it is not an arbitrary it is by definition based on a reasonable argument, whether you disagree with it or not. Arbitrary does not mean the lack of rules.
It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

Please, do elaborate. Difficult for whom to trust whom? After having answered that, please provide sources or at least attempt to explain what you base the claim upon


1 - That is, by definition, a straw man.
2 - That is, by definition, arbitary.
3 - Some quickies to start you off, though I'm sure your forum search skills will get you further:
- http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=281161 (Even Idra called out Twitch on late payments).
- http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=283641
- This exact thread, where MrBitter says that they will now force players to sign contracts to avoid this sort of issue.


Honestly you are either terrible at debate, or semantics, i'm not sure.


edit: not to mention your rhetoric is really dismissive. yes i realize now i'm being hypocritical but i wasn't engaging like syllogism was.
Deleted User 137586
Profile Joined January 2011
7859 Posts
January 30 2012 19:23 GMT
#2251
On January 31 2012 03:56 syllogism wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:50 rotegirte wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument

It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

This in particular is complete nonsense.


The question raised is exactly how such a rule regarding specifically forfeiting should be formulated. No one is blaming ONOG for handling an uncovered incident, since almost all major tournaments reserve their right to disqualify upon generic exception clauses and general sportsmanship codes. This is what allows them to disqualify players on a whim and handle exotic situations.

The argument is that one side acknowledges the right to forfeit and the other doesn't. The argument is a competitor has no obligation to compete, but an entertainer has. As a competitor I am but only accountable by my personal ambition. As an entertainer providing production value I am accountable towards my team, organizers and fans. There are voices demanding both of the extremes, either full right to forfeit without reasons needed or full refusal of such a right no matter what.

And there are other voices that realize that such extremes are not enforceable, damaging business and/or giving organizers disproportionate amounts of power. It is the question of how much you want one to be a competitor, which includes taking care of personal well-being, and how much of an entertainer providing public value he should be. And what ratio could be healthy to fairly represent both sides of a mutual relationship.


This is a very reasonable position to hold and I do not have any issues with it. Well put


Eh, no... It's not a good position to hold. He's effectively blaming us of being narrow-minded because we refuse to discount one aspect of the professionalism of progamer - the entertainment/organizational side. He wants us to forget that we need players to show up to games if we want to run tournaments and have fans at barcrafts.

As a middle-ground he claims we need "the right to forfeit." Which isn't middle-ground at all, in fact it's a ridiculous extreme unknown in professional sports across the globe. A forfeit can happen in the status quo, but only because of reasons beyond their control. He advocates for a right to forfeit for the lolz.
Cry 'havoc' and let slip the dogs of war
syllogism
Profile Joined September 2010
Finland5948 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-30 19:29:01
January 30 2012 19:28 GMT
#2252
On January 31 2012 04:23 Ghanburighan wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:56 syllogism wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:50 rotegirte wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument

It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

This in particular is complete nonsense.


The question raised is exactly how such a rule regarding specifically forfeiting should be formulated. No one is blaming ONOG for handling an uncovered incident, since almost all major tournaments reserve their right to disqualify upon generic exception clauses and general sportsmanship codes. This is what allows them to disqualify players on a whim and handle exotic situations.

The argument is that one side acknowledges the right to forfeit and the other doesn't. The argument is a competitor has no obligation to compete, but an entertainer has. As a competitor I am but only accountable by my personal ambition. As an entertainer providing production value I am accountable towards my team, organizers and fans. There are voices demanding both of the extremes, either full right to forfeit without reasons needed or full refusal of such a right no matter what.

And there are other voices that realize that such extremes are not enforceable, damaging business and/or giving organizers disproportionate amounts of power. It is the question of how much you want one to be a competitor, which includes taking care of personal well-being, and how much of an entertainer providing public value he should be. And what ratio could be healthy to fairly represent both sides of a mutual relationship.


This is a very reasonable position to hold and I do not have any issues with it. Well put


Eh, no... It's not a good position to hold. He's effectively blaming us of being narrow-minded because we refuse to discount one aspect of the professionalism of progamer - the entertainment/organizational side. He wants us to forget that we need players to show up to games if we want to run tournaments and have fans at barcrafts.

As a middle-ground he claims we need "the right to forfeit." Which isn't middle-ground at all, in fact it's a ridiculous extreme unknown in professional sports across the globe. A forfeit can happen in the status quo, but only because of reasons beyond their control. He advocates for a right to forfeit for the lolz.

I did not read his other posts so I may be lacking context, but I do not have an issue with the content of that single post, even if I think the "middle ground" isn't correct. I do not see him blaming anyone there or even suggesting what the correct answer is. I suppose then I'm wrong in that it's not a position at all.
Deleted User 137586
Profile Joined January 2011
7859 Posts
January 30 2012 19:32 GMT
#2253
On January 31 2012 04:28 syllogism wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 04:23 Ghanburighan wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:56 syllogism wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:50 rotegirte wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:01 syllogism wrote:
shaberu: a hypothetical question: If a player legitimately reaches finals and then cheats to win said finals, would you be fine with depriving said player of his winnings even if there is no specific rule? You basically posted the same assertions as before and they aren't particularly more compelling on a repeated viewing despite your apparent confidence in your argument

It's already difficult enough for people to trust one another with all the drama that unfolded over the past year (and so far this year).

This in particular is complete nonsense.


The question raised is exactly how such a rule regarding specifically forfeiting should be formulated. No one is blaming ONOG for handling an uncovered incident, since almost all major tournaments reserve their right to disqualify upon generic exception clauses and general sportsmanship codes. This is what allows them to disqualify players on a whim and handle exotic situations.

The argument is that one side acknowledges the right to forfeit and the other doesn't. The argument is a competitor has no obligation to compete, but an entertainer has. As a competitor I am but only accountable by my personal ambition. As an entertainer providing production value I am accountable towards my team, organizers and fans. There are voices demanding both of the extremes, either full right to forfeit without reasons needed or full refusal of such a right no matter what.

And there are other voices that realize that such extremes are not enforceable, damaging business and/or giving organizers disproportionate amounts of power. It is the question of how much you want one to be a competitor, which includes taking care of personal well-being, and how much of an entertainer providing public value he should be. And what ratio could be healthy to fairly represent both sides of a mutual relationship.


This is a very reasonable position to hold and I do not have any issues with it. Well put


Eh, no... It's not a good position to hold. He's effectively blaming us of being narrow-minded because we refuse to discount one aspect of the professionalism of progamer - the entertainment/organizational side. He wants us to forget that we need players to show up to games if we want to run tournaments and have fans at barcrafts.

As a middle-ground he claims we need "the right to forfeit." Which isn't middle-ground at all, in fact it's a ridiculous extreme unknown in professional sports across the globe. A forfeit can happen in the status quo, but only because of reasons beyond their control. He advocates for a right to forfeit for the lolz.

I did not read his other posts so I may be lacking context, but I do not have an issue with the content of that single post, even if I think the "middle ground" isn't correct. I do not see him blaming anyone there or even suggesting what the correct answer is. I suppose then I'm wrong in that it's not a position at all.


Yeah, I see what you're saying, it's just that he has pushed for the same idea every 5 pages of this thread. It gets argued against successfully, then he disappears and comes back with some new formulation. It's a nicer formulation this time, indeed... But at least I'm getting tired of repeating the same arguments over and over.
Cry 'havoc' and let slip the dogs of war
virpi
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
Germany3598 Posts
January 30 2012 20:41 GMT
#2254
In other sports, postponing matches is quite normal (just think of tennis!). of course, this here was a special situation. (mainly because of different timezones, stephano agreed to participate in that tournament, even though he knew that it might get late)
I also think that stephano made a mistake by playing two tournaments at the same time. sometimes you've got to know your own boundaries, and this is also a part of being a professional gamer.

But there's really no need to create a naniwaesque shitstorm. Stephano made a mistake, maybe the organizers of ONOG will ban him from their following event, so what. In my opinion, every player should be allowed to forfeit matches, if it's done in a mannered and fair way. Just logging off isn't very professional, though.

I still like Stephano. <3
first we make expand, then we defense it.
FantaFanta
Profile Joined January 2012
Germany225 Posts
January 30 2012 20:45 GMT
#2255
well reacted by mr bitter disqualifieing stephano. If he refuses to play the finals he might as well be disqualified. It was his choice, he valued what ever he wanted to do instead more than playing the finals that it is his right to do.

Now he carries the consequences like a man and wins the next tourneys.

Stephano Fan Nr.1 Over and Out.
holydevil
Profile Joined August 2010
United States145 Posts
January 30 2012 20:45 GMT
#2256
On January 31 2012 04:12 rotegirte wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 03:47 BloodThirsty wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:43 Champloo wrote:
I don't even know what this discussion is about. If you forfeit the finals you are second place. Simple as that.


How so? Its their tournament, they don't HAVE to pay you, unless there was a contract that was signed and what I have heard there was none. The tournament has to consider their own integrity for providing entertainment. VIEWERS are what pays for entertainment not a french player who is "le tired" and cant nap during 3rd place match drink energy drinks and try to play the finals. God forbid anyone stays up for a whole night in their life for 1500 dollars.

IF YA DONT WANT TO STAY UP LATE FOR A NA TOURNAMENT DONT PLAY IN IT. Simple as that GG


What the fucking hell. If you meet the requirements of placement, of course you have a right to receive the advertised prize. The difference is, every organizer reserves its right of extraordinary disqualification at their own disclosure. That's what exception clauses are for, to prepare for rare situations. It is then the duty of the organizer to state the reason of exception handling.

In this case, the reasons were:

Show nested quote +
[...]

If One Nation of Gamers is going to work out and do our part to grow eSports, we have to be an organization that puts the fans first. Given that principle, I came to the decision to penalize Stephano and move him to 4th place, have Catz and Illusion play for 2nd/3rd, and have the victor play against Kas.

Everyone involved with One Nation of Gamers has worked incredibly hard -for months- to raise the $3,000 that we've put up for grabs. It's not a lot to everyone, but it's a lot to us and represents month of volunteer work. We decided to run this tournament to give back to eSports, we wanted to help the pros earn a little more and we wanted to provide some great content to the fans. We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500.

[...]


Which consists of two reasons:

1) Stephano did not put the fans first
2) Stephano did not provide a final series worth 1,500$

No need to interpret, these were the reasons given by the head organizer.

The implications for any future player of ONOG would be:

1) You play for entertainment value first and second for the spirit of competition
2) If we deem your performance not worth a specific, but undefined measure of entertainment value, you can be stripped of your earnings at any given time.

The disrupt occurs in the perceived purpose of a player. Organizers, players and fans are inter-dependent. As much as players rely on events as funding source and public promotion platform, tournaments rely on the players as audience provider. As much as we support them do what they do by our customer dollars, we are dependent on them to exist and willing to provide the entertainment we want.

To say that entertainment value should be prioritized over everything else is debatable.




I wouldn't say that was the take away. I think a big problem here is that is appears that my restructure was arbitrary. It wasn't. I will try my best to explain.

Look, Stephano started his series pretty late. I think Stephano v. vileIllusion started their semi-finals series at like 7 EST (1 AM France time?).

Before the start of this series, Stephano was aware that we would be playing for 3rd before the finals. I feel like, as a player at this point in the tournament, he was on notice that semi-finals -> finals would probably extend to 4 am.

Immediately after finishing his series with vileIllusion, Stephano said he was tired and did not want to continue playing. This felt pretty abrupt because he was pretty chatty with vileIllusion throughout the series. He told us he either wanted to play the final tomorrow or he would quit. We made two offers which, I believe, was gracious: We offered to switch and let Stephano and Kas to play their finals match first and we offered to have them play at the same time of the third and cast the final from replays. Stephano declined both options and logged off.

At this point I was pretty much in a bind and needed to make a choice. My thought process was that I should give the audience a final match (esp barcrafts in NA). My other thought process was that Stephano, because of his experience and intelligence, had to know that this would go until like 4 am in France before he started his semi-final round at 7 EST. Accordingly, because he should have known the general end time of the tournament, I felt he should have made a decision to forfeit before starting the semi-final match against vileIllusion. So, I decided to place Stephano back to a point in the tournament where I felt -based on the forfeit reason provided i.e., fatigue- he would have been reasonably aware of the likely end time of the tournament and should have made a decision. I then adjusted the positions of Catz and Illusion accordingly.

Lastly, tournaments do not have full control of scheduling - Stephano was participating in SCAN and Bitter had a prior commitment and also could not start earlier. Given who was involved, that was the earliest we could start the event. Originally, we wanted to start at 1 EST.

I think it's arguable whether I am right or wrong, but my decision definitely wasn't arbitrary. I had reasoning and I guess you can now go ahead and decide if it's 'stupid' or not. I'm sorry this has become such a huge issue and I am also sorry that Stephano is being dragged in the mud so much. He has since apologized for his actions and I do not harbor any ill will. Both sides made mistakes it happens. I think some valuable lessons for organizers and players is to make sure your tournament rules are comprehensive so that situations like this aren't 'winged.' As a player, you should be aware of time zones that online tournaments are based out of when you decide to accept invitations.

era909
Profile Joined January 2012
Sweden139 Posts
January 30 2012 21:09 GMT
#2257
On January 31 2012 05:45 holydevil wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 04:12 rotegirte wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:47 BloodThirsty wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:43 Champloo wrote:
I don't even know what this discussion is about. If you forfeit the finals you are second place. Simple as that.


How so? Its their tournament, they don't HAVE to pay you, unless there was a contract that was signed and what I have heard there was none. The tournament has to consider their own integrity for providing entertainment. VIEWERS are what pays for entertainment not a french player who is "le tired" and cant nap during 3rd place match drink energy drinks and try to play the finals. God forbid anyone stays up for a whole night in their life for 1500 dollars.

IF YA DONT WANT TO STAY UP LATE FOR A NA TOURNAMENT DONT PLAY IN IT. Simple as that GG


What the fucking hell. If you meet the requirements of placement, of course you have a right to receive the advertised prize. The difference is, every organizer reserves its right of extraordinary disqualification at their own disclosure. That's what exception clauses are for, to prepare for rare situations. It is then the duty of the organizer to state the reason of exception handling.

In this case, the reasons were:

[...]

If One Nation of Gamers is going to work out and do our part to grow eSports, we have to be an organization that puts the fans first. Given that principle, I came to the decision to penalize Stephano and move him to 4th place, have Catz and Illusion play for 2nd/3rd, and have the victor play against Kas.

Everyone involved with One Nation of Gamers has worked incredibly hard -for months- to raise the $3,000 that we've put up for grabs. It's not a lot to everyone, but it's a lot to us and represents month of volunteer work. We decided to run this tournament to give back to eSports, we wanted to help the pros earn a little more and we wanted to provide some great content to the fans. We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500.

[...]


Which consists of two reasons:

1) Stephano did not put the fans first
2) Stephano did not provide a final series worth 1,500$

No need to interpret, these were the reasons given by the head organizer.

The implications for any future player of ONOG would be:

1) You play for entertainment value first and second for the spirit of competition
2) If we deem your performance not worth a specific, but undefined measure of entertainment value, you can be stripped of your earnings at any given time.

The disrupt occurs in the perceived purpose of a player. Organizers, players and fans are inter-dependent. As much as players rely on events as funding source and public promotion platform, tournaments rely on the players as audience provider. As much as we support them do what they do by our customer dollars, we are dependent on them to exist and willing to provide the entertainment we want.

To say that entertainment value should be prioritized over everything else is debatable.




I wouldn't say that was the take away. I think a big problem here is that is appears that my restructure was arbitrary. It wasn't. I will try my best to explain.

Look, Stephano started his series pretty late. I think Stephano v. vileIllusion started their semi-finals series at like 7 EST (1 AM France time?).

Before the start of this series, Stephano was aware that we would be playing for 3rd before the finals. I feel like, as a player at this point in the tournament, he was on notice that semi-finals -> finals would probably extend to 4 am.

Immediately after finishing his series with vileIllusion, Stephano said he was tired and did not want to continue playing. This felt pretty abrupt because he was pretty chatty with vileIllusion throughout the series. He told us he either wanted to play the final tomorrow or he would quit. We made two offers which, I believe, was gracious: We offered to switch and let Stephano and Kas to play their finals match first and we offered to have them play at the same time of the third and cast the final from replays. Stephano declined both options and logged off.

At this point I was pretty much in a bind and needed to make a choice. My thought process was that I should give the audience a final match (esp barcrafts in NA). My other thought process was that Stephano, because of his experience and intelligence, had to know that this would go until like 4 am in France before he started his semi-final round at 7 EST. Accordingly, because he should have known the general end time of the tournament, I felt he should have made a decision to forfeit before starting the semi-final match against vileIllusion. So, I decided to place Stephano back to a point in the tournament where I felt -based on the forfeit reason provided i.e., fatigue- he would have been reasonably aware of the likely end time of the tournament and should have made a decision. I then adjusted the positions of Catz and Illusion accordingly.

Lastly, tournaments do not have full control of scheduling - Stephano was participating in SCAN and Bitter had a prior commitment and also could not start earlier. Given who was involved, that was the earliest we could start the event. Originally, we wanted to start at 1 EST.

I think it's arguable whether I am right or wrong, but my decision definitely wasn't arbitrary. I had reasoning and I guess you can now go ahead and decide if it's 'stupid' or not. I'm sorry this has become such a huge issue and I am also sorry that Stephano is being dragged in the mud so much. He has since apologized for his actions and I do not harbor any ill will. Both sides made mistakes it happens. I think some valuable lessons for organizers and players is to make sure your tournament rules are comprehensive so that situations like this aren't 'winged.' As a player, you should be aware of time zones that online tournaments are based out of when you decide to accept invitations.



So if he'd had to forfeit due to injury would you have decided that it was probably just before the semi finals that he started to feel pain and thus it was at that point he should have quit?

Just curious.
onPHYRE
Profile Joined October 2010
Bulgaria908 Posts
January 30 2012 21:47 GMT
#2258
On January 31 2012 03:09 1Eris1 wrote:
Haha wow. People defeinding Stephano really need to to stop and think.

The tournament length is posted. You sign up for that tournament, you are fully aware of said tournaments restrictions and thus you are expected to follow it.

Stephano didn't. Of course he deserves to be reprimanded.

No one forced him to sign up for the tournament. He, and only he, is responsible



I think most people agree that Stephano was also in the wrong. What the problem was related to how the organizers handled the situation, retrospectivley adding rules that unfairly hurt a player. They were both wrong, no one was saying Stephano played it perfectly or acted mature, but does that mean the organizers can be like "Oh we are hurt, so we will make up rules to punish the player, beyond forfeit of the finals." This rule was not stated before hand, but made up on the spot based on circumstance and how they felt cheated themselves. Not a good precedent to set.
Livin' this life like it was written.
Dandy_Moustachu
Profile Joined July 2010
France422 Posts
January 30 2012 21:51 GMT
#2259
On January 31 2012 05:45 holydevil wrote:
We offered to switch and let Stephano and Kas to play their finals match first and we offered to have them play at the same time of the third and cast the final from replays. Stephano declined both options and logged off.


You can't really call this 2 differents options :
You have the choice :
- You can play now
Or
- You can play now.

(I'm not saying your call was wrong yet)
Pif Paf Pouf
Djin)ftw(
Profile Blog Joined November 2008
Germany3357 Posts
January 30 2012 22:18 GMT
#2260
On January 31 2012 06:09 era909 wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 31 2012 05:45 holydevil wrote:
On January 31 2012 04:12 rotegirte wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:47 BloodThirsty wrote:
On January 31 2012 03:43 Champloo wrote:
I don't even know what this discussion is about. If you forfeit the finals you are second place. Simple as that.


How so? Its their tournament, they don't HAVE to pay you, unless there was a contract that was signed and what I have heard there was none. The tournament has to consider their own integrity for providing entertainment. VIEWERS are what pays for entertainment not a french player who is "le tired" and cant nap during 3rd place match drink energy drinks and try to play the finals. God forbid anyone stays up for a whole night in their life for 1500 dollars.

IF YA DONT WANT TO STAY UP LATE FOR A NA TOURNAMENT DONT PLAY IN IT. Simple as that GG


What the fucking hell. If you meet the requirements of placement, of course you have a right to receive the advertised prize. The difference is, every organizer reserves its right of extraordinary disqualification at their own disclosure. That's what exception clauses are for, to prepare for rare situations. It is then the duty of the organizer to state the reason of exception handling.

In this case, the reasons were:

[...]

If One Nation of Gamers is going to work out and do our part to grow eSports, we have to be an organization that puts the fans first. Given that principle, I came to the decision to penalize Stephano and move him to 4th place, have Catz and Illusion play for 2nd/3rd, and have the victor play against Kas.

Everyone involved with One Nation of Gamers has worked incredibly hard -for months- to raise the $3,000 that we've put up for grabs. It's not a lot to everyone, but it's a lot to us and represents month of volunteer work. We decided to run this tournament to give back to eSports, we wanted to help the pros earn a little more and we wanted to provide some great content to the fans. We believe everyone deserves to see an appropriate final series for $1,500.

[...]


Which consists of two reasons:

1) Stephano did not put the fans first
2) Stephano did not provide a final series worth 1,500$

No need to interpret, these were the reasons given by the head organizer.

The implications for any future player of ONOG would be:

1) You play for entertainment value first and second for the spirit of competition
2) If we deem your performance not worth a specific, but undefined measure of entertainment value, you can be stripped of your earnings at any given time.

The disrupt occurs in the perceived purpose of a player. Organizers, players and fans are inter-dependent. As much as players rely on events as funding source and public promotion platform, tournaments rely on the players as audience provider. As much as we support them do what they do by our customer dollars, we are dependent on them to exist and willing to provide the entertainment we want.

To say that entertainment value should be prioritized over everything else is debatable.




I wouldn't say that was the take away. I think a big problem here is that is appears that my restructure was arbitrary. It wasn't. I will try my best to explain.

Look, Stephano started his series pretty late. I think Stephano v. vileIllusion started their semi-finals series at like 7 EST (1 AM France time?).

Before the start of this series, Stephano was aware that we would be playing for 3rd before the finals. I feel like, as a player at this point in the tournament, he was on notice that semi-finals -> finals would probably extend to 4 am.

Immediately after finishing his series with vileIllusion, Stephano said he was tired and did not want to continue playing. This felt pretty abrupt because he was pretty chatty with vileIllusion throughout the series. He told us he either wanted to play the final tomorrow or he would quit. We made two offers which, I believe, was gracious: We offered to switch and let Stephano and Kas to play their finals match first and we offered to have them play at the same time of the third and cast the final from replays. Stephano declined both options and logged off.

At this point I was pretty much in a bind and needed to make a choice. My thought process was that I should give the audience a final match (esp barcrafts in NA). My other thought process was that Stephano, because of his experience and intelligence, had to know that this would go until like 4 am in France before he started his semi-final round at 7 EST. Accordingly, because he should have known the general end time of the tournament, I felt he should have made a decision to forfeit before starting the semi-final match against vileIllusion. So, I decided to place Stephano back to a point in the tournament where I felt -based on the forfeit reason provided i.e., fatigue- he would have been reasonably aware of the likely end time of the tournament and should have made a decision. I then adjusted the positions of Catz and Illusion accordingly.

Lastly, tournaments do not have full control of scheduling - Stephano was participating in SCAN and Bitter had a prior commitment and also could not start earlier. Given who was involved, that was the earliest we could start the event. Originally, we wanted to start at 1 EST.

I think it's arguable whether I am right or wrong, but my decision definitely wasn't arbitrary. I had reasoning and I guess you can now go ahead and decide if it's 'stupid' or not. I'm sorry this has become such a huge issue and I am also sorry that Stephano is being dragged in the mud so much. He has since apologized for his actions and I do not harbor any ill will. Both sides made mistakes it happens. I think some valuable lessons for organizers and players is to make sure your tournament rules are comprehensive so that situations like this aren't 'winged.' As a player, you should be aware of time zones that online tournaments are based out of when you decide to accept invitations.



So if he'd had to forfeit due to injury would you have decided that it was probably just before the semi finals that he started to feel pain and thus it was at that point he should have quit?

Just curious.


Exactly. What if he had said "ouch. just hurt my hand badly, sorry cant play like this."

this is all so arbitrary.
"jk CLG best mindgames using the baron to counterthrow" - boesthius
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