@Combat ruling, round 8 of PT Aether Revolt
The 'combat' ruling at PT Aether Revolt during Round 8 annoyed me so much that I decided to write something. You can watch the game here:
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/119438395
Nguyen vs Segovia, game 1, the jduge call comes about 5:28 min in. I'll sum up the situation:
Segovia has two 3/2 artifact creatures and a 4/4 vehicle. Main phase 1 he casts a weldfast engineer, 3/3, 'at the beginning of combat on your turn, target artifact creature you control gets +2+0 until end of turn'. He sais the word 'combat' and taps his engineer to crew the 4/4 vehicle.
His opponent immediatly calls a judge. But he doesn't call a judge for the missed weldfast engineer trigger. He calls the judge because apparently someone somewhere decided that saying the word 'combat' means you're declaring attackers. That's the first time I've heard this. Both me and my opponents have declared 'combat' thousands of times to enter the combat step. If you google 'announcing combat magic the gathering', the top result is 'The Combat Phase' on wizards.com. Nothing there connects 'combat' with declaring attackers. That is very clearly defined as 'declaring attackers step'. If wotc or/and the dci want to mint phrases people can be called on, that should maybe be on their website and in the rulesbook. Because otherwise its a load of garbage. I tried 10 minutes to google the phrase that 'combat' means you're declaring attackers and I wasn't successful.
20 years ago people asked their opponents "okay, can I lightning bolt you?". If they answered "Yes", they'd say "Oh, I changed my mind. but you passed priority and thus ended your turn." What happened in this match for me is on the same level. In an ideal world I would've wanted to see an unsportsmanslike conduct warning for Nguyen as the outcome of this judge call. His opponent was obviously not very fluent in english and technically not a perfect magic player, but his intention was crystal clear.
He wanted to enter his attack step and activate his vehicle to attack. Calling him on the missed trigger is perfectly fine. Magically skipping the beginning of combat step he VERY obviously wanted to use to crew his vehicle is not. That's rules lawyering on a very low level and magic over the past 10-20 years has done a lot to make exactly this not possible.
Again, what Nguyen should have done here is wait what Segovia does after he crews his vehicle. If he then wants to use the trigger of his Weldfast Engineer, you THEN call a judge and explain that by saying 'combat' he clearly indicated entering the combat phase. No one can deny/argue that. Then he crewed his vehicle before attacks. The intention for that was absolutely clear. Between the word 'combat' and looking at Nguyen to see that he confirms we're in the combat step, he immediatly tapped his engineer to crew his vehicle. Now on PT level I suppose that's a missed trigger on the engineer and that's something Nguyen has a legitime claim that it was forgotten. That had to happen at the very beginning of the beginning of combat step and you can't play non-triggered effects like the crewing-ability without putting the engineer on the stack first and announcing a target for that.
Ruling that saying 'combat' means you're skipping straight from your main phase to declare attackers is beyond insane to me. There were beginning of combat effects, both a trigger and the crewing process. Of course you announce the combat step. And how do you announce it? by saying combat. Wizards of the Coast called it the COMBAT step.
MtG, the grand prix and pro tour circuits are international games. I don't know how many different nationalities are playing in PT Aether Revolt but it's surely above 50. You can not expect everyone to be fluent in english. Again, Segovia's intention was 100% clear and he communicated it perfectly. He wanted to enter the Combat Step, crew his vehicle and attack. He probably also wanted to use the engineer trigger, but well, he messed the timing up for that. There were seconds between him saying 'combat' and tapping his creature to crew. He didn't tap other creatures to indicate he is in declare attackers or anything like that.
Making this ruling basically means if you are not 100% fluent in english - and apparently now you have to be fluent in DCI english as well - who knows what some other word might mean? You could end your turn by saying 'okay, that's fine.' - you are priced into never talking to your opponent at all. Does the DCI really want to have a translating judge at every table because people are afraid to be rules lawyered out of their turn if they try to communicate with their opponent in english? Is that where we want to get to? Again, Magic has moved away from exactly that and I'm honestly not sure what happened today in this game at the PT and how that ruling ended up the way it was. I almost hope that Segovia did something wrong when he talked to the judge and messed something up there. But it's all on video and nailing a non-english native speaker who very, very clearly wanted to enter his attack step to crew a vehicle at beginning of combat on the word 'combat' when he wanted to enter his combat step is not understandable on so many levels for me.
I am extremely happy that Segovia ended up winning the match. I honestly don't know Thien Nguyen at all, but just from that judge call, I am tempted to hope for an 0-8 performance tomorrow. To be fair he was sitting at 7-0 at the PT and that puts a lot of pressure on you. But still, that judge call and the ruling is just not acceptable from my ethics point of view ...