speedchase wrote:jts wrote:Tournaments are serious business. Casual games are less serious. In a way, you could see the kgs policy as partially outsourcing policing to the users. It would suck for the admins if they had to be involved in every single personality clash. A td has signed up for that mediator/therapist role already.
I don't really see the distinction you are trying to draw. a TD has signed up to direct a tournament. An admin has signed up to administrate a go server. In both cases those are jobs where you hope that there is not disagreement, but your job is to settle it if it does occur. What would admins be needed for if there were no disputes?
Let's compare a tournament director to the (unofficial) head of my local go club. The guy who runs my local go club does a lot of important stuff - he sends out emails, he lets us know about local go events, sometimes he brings extra sets, and so on. But no one would go to him with beef about another player. You would never see two players go to him bickering about sportsmanship. We would never ask him to resolve a rules dispute or a complicated L&D status - he knows nothing about rules, and he's not particularly strong. If something did come up between two players, and he got over his shock at being asked to intervene, he would probably suggest they play other people. "But who won
this game????", they whine plaintively. He shrugs indifferently and returns to his own game.
A tournament director is not like that. A tournament is designed to find one more winners, and give them prizes, and report results to the AGA that are then used for official purposes (pro qulaifiers, and so on). Given that the point of the tournament is to appoint a winner, you can't just say "Oh guys, get over it, it's just a game", because then at the end you don't know who won. If something comes up during a game that calls the correct course of the game or its outcome into question, the tournament director is the final authority. It doesn't matter if he barely understands the difference between Chinese and Japanese, it doesn't matter if he wouldn't know an unremovable ko threat if it poked him in the eye. The TD has volunteered to be the ultimate authority on all disputes relating to the outcome of the tournament (as well as ensuring that everyone has a good time, that the premises get cleaned up, etc).
Does that seem like a reasonable distinction to make? Casual games = playing for fun = casual attitude towards the outcome of games = the guy in charge doesn't need to be the final authority on every little thing. Tournament = playing to determine a winner = strict attitude towards the outcome of games = the guy in charge is always the final authority. Certainly there are always disagreements in life, but which types of disagreements need to be settled by a higher authority depends on the setting in which they occur.