
Anyone else notice Nick asking Sam for his numbers in round 11


SUNCREAM/UNCREASE in round 4.
Moderator: James Robinson
James Robinson wrote: Anyone else notice Nick asking Sam for his numbers in round 11![]()
I think they'd have to accept it. You declared not written down, so you've done everything right. It's not your fault that your opponent was asked for their closer solution first because it looked like it wouldn't be the same as yours.Keith Bennett wrote:In the first numbers game I would have declared 969 not written down (having seen it fairly quickly, then spent the rest of the time failing to find 968). As she declared 968 Nick would have gone to her first. She then gives the same solution to 969 that I have in mind, and of course realises she's mis-declared. So all I can do is say "same way". Would they take my word for it?
Yeah, and in this instance I think it's completely plausible that you see it and not write it down - it's not difficult to remember, it's most likely going to be the first thing you try etc, totally believable. You could easily imagine other scenarios though where the answer given was way more convoluted and non-obvious, where you'd go "really? you BOTH happened to think of that, and didn't write it down?" and then I think you'd need some of kind Jeremy Kyle-style lie detector.Graeme Cole wrote:I think they'd have to accept it. You declared not written down, so you've done everything right. It's not your fault that your opponent was asked for their closer solution first because it looked like it wouldn't be the same as yours.Keith Bennett wrote:In the first numbers game I would have declared 969 not written down (having seen it fairly quickly, then spent the rest of the time failing to find 968). As she declared 968 Nick would have gone to her first. She then gives the same solution to 969 that I have in mind, and of course realises she's mis-declared. So all I can do is say "same way". Would they take my word for it?
If you had 969 the same way but been second to declare, would you still need to say 'not written down' as your opponent had already declared something different?Graeme Cole wrote:I think they'd have to accept it. You declared not written down, so you've done everything right. It's not your fault that your opponent was asked for their closer solution first because it looked like it wouldn't be the same as yours.Keith Bennett wrote:In the first numbers game I would have declared 969 not written down (having seen it fairly quickly, then spent the rest of the time failing to find 968). As she declared 968 Nick would have gone to her first. She then gives the same solution to 969 that I have in mind, and of course realises she's mis-declared. So all I can do is say "same way". Would they take my word for it?
It's probably always safest to say NWD for that reason. But in practice you probably wouldn't think to. She says "968", you say "I could only get 969", assuming you're not going to get the chance to declare, and certainly not predicting she'd actually have made 969 your way without realising.Philip Wilson wrote:If you had 969 the same way but been second to declare, would you still need to say 'not written down' as your opponent had already declared something different?Graeme Cole wrote:I think they'd have to accept it. You declared not written down, so you've done everything right. It's not your fault that your opponent was asked for their closer solution first because it looked like it wouldn't be the same as yours.Keith Bennett wrote:In the first numbers game I would have declared 969 not written down (having seen it fairly quickly, then spent the rest of the time failing to find 968). As she declared 968 Nick would have gone to her first. She then gives the same solution to 969 that I have in mind, and of course realises she's mis-declared. So all I can do is say "same way". Would they take my word for it?
He did what? He asked for his numbers in a letters round?James Robinson wrote:A quiet day today it seems...![]()
Anyone else notice Nick asking Sam for his numbers in round 11.