Oh wow, I did not expect this at all. I thought if they gave the win to Eric it would have been with an actual reasoning. Instead they just decided to wash their hands of responsibility and dump it on the player.
- The proctor's job did not include checking player's moves (they were only instructed to make sure the players do not use an AI tool during the game).
Holy escape, Batman! I haven't seen a backpedal this fast since last week on Donald Trump's twitter!
If this is truly ALL the proctors did, shame on the tournament. Are they seriously claiming the proctors followed the players to the toilet to check they weren't cheating on a phone or something?
- Mateusz was aware of the technical issue for some time, but never reported the issue to the tournament organizers.
This person is a Go professional. He had people watching the game locally. Why and how in the tournament rules is it stated that if lag is not reported it's the responsibility of the player? Is it not reasonable to assume that the proctor would at least do that much? Or if it's pretty well-known that Surma generally has a bad Internet connection, why the heck is it his responsibility to inform the TOs about it?
Further, is the proctor not a tournament official, if in a minor capacity? If Surma has complained to him AT LEAST ONCE about the lag or he has noticed it himself, this reasoning is false and biased.
Let this sink in: The tournament organizers are basically saying that if you do not after EACH AND EVERY lag spike inform the TOs of it, they will use that fact against you. Also, they will NOT fix the clock in this case, because it's KGS and they can't do that. So they are dumping a responsibility to do something that any reasonable person would expect the tournament organizers to handle to the player without informing them beforehand. The reasoning is pure bullcrap and was drawn from the hat because the TOs do not want to admit they made a mistake. If they want to use this reasoning, they could use it at a later date, but to introduce it here is ridiculous, unfair and against the spirit of the game and the tournament.
The tournament organizers are shamefully ignoring their responsibility for the choice of venue, observers and practical issues and are letting what is effectively a broken chess clock decide an important game. They are also unfairly inserting ad-hoc rules into the situation. This decision is a disgrace to international Go and a slap in the face to the players and viewers alike.