Javaness2 wrote:Why, Robert, do you say that rule 4 only applies to the board position?
1) I do not remember what the intention was during the writing of that rule.
2) "position" is a term for board position.
3) The rule does not explicitly mention disturbance of playing material in general.
Do you mean to say that you have to update rule 4 to specify board position?
No.
You do your self a dis-service by trying to invent problems where they do not exist.
I do not interpret rules with the intention of pretending an interpretation I do not see in them, in particular not for a side aim such as getting more or fewer problems. (It is unclear whether there would be more or fewer. You guess fewer but other guesses are possible.)
If a pass was defined properly, there would not be such a problem.
There would be other problems. How often do you want players to call a referee per game to enforce their opponents' proper passes with properly announcing "pass"? Maybe we avoid one problem but we get others! Things are not as simple as you paint.
This adds clarity to the game mechanics.
I would have no problem with always saying "pass" but I expect many others to make big fuss about having to say "pass". Can you convince them to also always say "pass"? "pass", not "Finished?". In English, not in Japanese.
You could even say "A player may indicate a pass by clearly saying 'Pass', or by giving a pass stone to his opponent"... and then pressing the clock.
Sure. See above.
How can this be abused in practice?
The problem is not abuse but refusal.
It is to the detriment of the EGF's reputation that this should be acceptable practice.
Convince all players, change their practice. I have no problem with such a rules change for myself as a player. As a referee, currently I would be scared by many complaints about opponents not always saying pass and not always doing so properly