Cactus Game Design Message Boards

Redemption® Collectible Trading Card Game HQ => Redemption® Resources and Thinktank => Topic started by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 06:47:56 AM

Title: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 06:47:56 AM
Hey,

A response to Bryon's comments in the Hall of Fame thread.  Placed in a separate thread as per Prof U's request.

It is no surprise that there are more players from the North Central Region on the list, since there have been many more national tournaments in that Region (or very near that region).

It is true that the North Central Region has hosted more National Tournaments than any other region, but that's not why there are more players from the North Central Region on the list of candidates.  All five players from the North Central Region won at least half (2 or more) of their national titles at National tournaments not held in the North Central Region.  Of the 17 National Titles won by the North Central Region candidates 12 of them were won away from the North Central Region.

Quote
Andy Siew has a lot of points on the all-time list, in spite of the fact that he's never been to a National event.  I'd be curious to see how his point total ranks against everyone else, once you remove all the points they got from nationals events.

Andy Siew ranks 31st on the all-time RNRS list if you discount all points won at nationals (compared to 37th with them).  Andy Siew has 517 RNRS points.  The Hall of Fame Candidates have the following RNRS totals (discounting those won at Nationals):

Tim Maly      1238.6
Justin Alstad 1061.9
Sam Nurge     1004.6
Gabe Isbell    791.5
Josh Hey       390
Gil Kimmons    344
Ron Sias       209
Keith Bartram   10

Quote
Juan and Miguel Arriaga were also extremely good players in their day.  I almost always lost to those guys, yet, when I went to nationals during their heyday, I won.

That's kinda misleading.  Their lifetime RNRS points suggest they were not Type 2 players, and all of your wins at nationals were in Type 2.

Quote
If they'd been able to go to national tournaments like North Central players were, they would likely be Redemption legends known nationwide.
Quote
Unfortunately, the list also leaves off players who were likely as good or better than those on the list, but who never got to attend a national tournament during their ~4 year playing run.

Any player can claim that they can beat anyone, the players on this list have actually done it.  You don't get into a hall of fame on potential, you get into a hall of fame based on achievement.

It is true that Californian players have had fewer opportunities to play the best players in the country, but they haven't made much of the opportunities they have had and no one in California has even set themselves apart from the other players in California.  Every Hall of Fame candidate except Keith Bartram has at least 4 regional or national titles (5 of the 8 have at least 4 regional titles).  Other than Kurt, no California player has more than three.  Chris Bany in one visit to California acquired three regional titles, despite having accumulated zero regional in his home North Central Region over nine years.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: YourMathTeacher on January 31, 2010, 09:52:06 AM
Mark may have requested that these be put into a separate thread, but that was just so the voting could continue in spite of objections.

In other words, this thread is meaningless.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: STAMP on January 31, 2010, 10:42:27 AM
And to make it more meaningless, I will actually post here.   :D
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 11:16:59 AM
So my point is validated: Andy Siew has more RNRS points than half the players on the player list.

Chris Bany had one very good Regional event in CA.  Any one of those categories could have gone the other way.  Andy Siew would have won his game 7-1 if he'd not blocked Chris a turn before Andy was going to win.

Brian Cooper came to our Regionals and, before the event, I beat him in 3 consecutive Type 2 games.  Does that invalidate the successes he had in other regions?

Sure, I won my consecutive titles in Type 2, not type 1.  But I was no better of a Type 2 player than Type 1.  I had WAY more experience in Type 1.  I'd never really played much Type 2 - never in a tournament until the nats where I won my first title.  The Arriagas almost always beat me in Type 1.  So did Andy Siew.  So did a couple others from further back.  When I had success at the national tournament, I was surprised.  I thought I would have faced players better than those back home.  I did not.  But no one will ever know, since those players were never allowed to go to a national event during their 4-year span.

One thing I think should be awarded in the Hall of Fame are players who are at the top of their game for over 4 years.  That is something that has not really happened much in CA.  I can't help but wonder if that would have been different if those players had gained notoriety on the national scene.  Becoming respected in this great community is an encouragement to stick with the game.

Tim, you still didn't address my comments about winning in national events that were ADJACENT to their own region.  How many players of high school age (or younger) have won national titles in Regions not their own, and not adjacent to their own?

Better yet, go ahead and just list the number of national tournaments that have taken place less than 1600 miles from each player on the "top player" list.

For our playgroup: 1 (the 2009 event, which happened too late for the best of our players)

You could also check to see how many of those players live within 500 miles of a playgroup in another state.  CA players have zero.  Players in CA don't have as many opportunities to compete in other state events if they don't place in their own.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on January 31, 2010, 01:31:49 PM
Quote
So my point is validated: Andy Siew has more RNRS points than half the players on the player list.

Not strictly true keep in mind that both Hey, Bartram and Sias played, and won, before the invention of RNRS. I think it would be a very good experiment to go pouring over redemption history and calculate just how many points Bartram would have had. I'm willing to be it would have been alot.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 03:52:51 PM
Quote
So my point is validated: Andy Siew has more RNRS points than half the players on the player list.

Not strictly true keep in mind that both Hey, Bartram and Sias played, and won, before the invention of RNRS. I think it would be a very good experiment to go pouring over redemption history and calculate just how many points Bartram would have had. I'm willing to be it would have been alot.
That is an excellent point.  But, according to Tim, "You don't get into a hall of fame on potential, you get into a hall of fame based on achievement."

In my mind, some of the very top players in past years will never get to the Hall of Fame because their achievements were limited by lack of access.  And some players' scores are inflated because of the overabundance of access - to both national tournaments AND another state tournament(s) within 500 miles.

This is to take nothing away from the players who have driven the miles to another state tournament, who have played for years and years and years and years (like Tim, who would certainly get one of my votes for top 2 players).  It just shows the flaws in the system.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: lightningninja on January 31, 2010, 04:03:23 PM
I agree with Bryon as one of those CA competitors who wins regionals, states, but doesn't get to go to nationals. You guys also bring up how other regions are more competitive, cause they have more players. But I'd rather play against more players than fewer, good players. In debate tournaments, if there are over 100 debaters it's amazing; that means that many more debaters who aren't the selected few that I don't want to debate fill my rounds and make it harder to debate the really good debaters. Same in Redemption. I wouldn't ever be confident in a round against Tim Maly, Gabe Isbell, and Justin Alstad, for example. The more people who aren't them, the easier it's gonna be.

Here in CA, we play the same people a lot. We have to beat the other top players in our Region numerous times in numerous events in order to win. It's tough.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on January 31, 2010, 04:37:31 PM
Same in Redemption. I wouldn't ever be confident in a round against Tim Maly, Gabe Isbell, and Justin Alstad, for example. The more people who aren't them, the easier it's gonna be.

Here in CA, we play the same people a lot. We have to beat the other top players in our Region numerous times in numerous events in order to win. It's tough.
the fact that Gabe and Tim have done so well and play each other at almost every state and regional tournament they attend is impressive. (Justin usually does T2). also, you're point of our competition being larger so it's easier is invalid, because after the first two rounds, it's tough going. now that we have RTS, we don't have to go to Nationals to play people from other places.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: EmJayBee83 on January 31, 2010, 04:39:49 PM
Tim, you still didn't address my comments about winning in national events that were ADJACENT to their own region.  How many players of high school age (or younger) have won national titles in Regions not their own, and not adjacent to their own?
Bryon, I'm not sure what value you think this measure has. Are you saying that your 2001 Nationals victory (Northeast region) was somehow better or more noteworthy than your victory in 2002 (North Central region)? Maybe I am unduly skeptical, but I am dubious that Gabe enjoyed some kind of advantage at the 2009 Nats, because the NC region is adjacent to the SW region.

In my mind, some of the very top players in past years will never get to the Hall of Fame because their achievements were limited by lack of access.  And some players' scores are inflated because of the overabundance of access - to both national tournaments AND another state tournament(s) within 500 miles.
For the current crop of candidates, Tim eliminated the RNRS points gained from Nationals in his most previous comparison, so that is currently moot. As far as traveling to other States goes, that is all well and good, but you are only allowed one set of RNRS points from a state tournament in a year precisely to eliminate this issue. If you want to put it another way, most of the time California players don't lose out on points because Tim or Gabe decided to drive to their State tournament and grab doubles.

Here in CA, we play the same people a lot. We have to beat the other top players in our Region numerous times in numerous events in order to win. It's tough.
Here in the MN we also play the same people a lot. We have to beat the other top players in our Region numerous times in numerous events in order to win. In addition to all of that, we also have to manage to beat a large quantity of other players just to earn a chance to face the top caliber competition. With all due respect, given comparable top-level competition, winning a tournament with more players is much more difficult than winning a tournament with fewer.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Prof Underwood on January 31, 2010, 04:41:29 PM
It just shows the flaws in the system.
There are flaws in the system, as there are in any system.  I am just trying to make as good a system as I can.  Sure there will be players who played before there were RNRS points, and who couldn't ever get to a national tournament.  There were great players in the "negro leagues" of baseball which have very spotty stats that survive, and therefore are hurt in their HoF bids.  This is inherently a problem in any project like this.  But I am trying to deal with these issues.  I've been reading these boards for many years, and I never heard of the Arriagas until this HoF stuff.  That actually encourages me that it is accomplishing one of its purposes by spotlighting people who would have otherwise been forgotten.  There have been great players over the years from all over, this spring we'll open up nominations and hopefully get a chance to hear about many others like the Arriagas, Siew, etc.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 05:43:55 PM
If Tim or Gabe loses at state, they can go to another state event to pick up the state points.  Players in Southern CA can't do that, unless they drive 530+ miles to NV State (which is possible, but highly unlikely for high school kids).

For CA players, they only get one shot.  Players on the East have multiple shots at State points within 500 miles.

Have any of the top players picked up State points out of state?  Have any of them picked up regional points out of region?  Remove all the out-of-state state points, and out-of-region regional points from the overall rankings, and see if that makes a difference.  I don't know if that is possible, though, since it doesn't matter where you go to get your state points.  Opportunity is half the battle, and SoCA kids don't have it.

I agree it is harder to win a tournament with more players in it, assuming roughly equal average strength of players, which is next to impossible to determine.

It is also hard to win a tournament with 20 players (yesterday's local), when the top player techs his deck specifically against yours, since he knows 2 top players are using Genesis decks.  :)  But I'm not bitter or anything... (dumb Possessing Demon!).  :)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on January 31, 2010, 05:51:31 PM
If Tim or Gabe loses at state, they can go to another state event to pick up the state points.  Players in Southern CA can't do that, unless they drive 530+ miles to NV State (which is possible, but highly unlikely for high school kids).

For CA players, they only get one shot.  Players on the East have multiple shots at State points within 500 miles.

Have any of the top players picked up State points out of state?  Have any of them picked up regional points out of region?  Remove all the out-of-state state points, and out-of-region regional points from the overall rankings, and see if that makes a difference.  I don't know if that is possible, though, since it doesn't matter where you go to get your state points.  Opportunity is half the battle, and SoCA kids don't have it.

I agree it is harder to win a tournament with more players in it, assuming roughly equal average strength of players, which is next to impossible to determine.

It is also hard to win a tournament with 20 players (yesterday's local), when the top player techs his deck specifically against yours, since he knows 2 top players are using Genesis decks.  :)  But I'm not bitter or anything... (dumb Possessing Demon!).  :)
they both attend IA and MN. just because you win once doesn't mean you can't win again, outside of RNRS wise... and as far as the "out-of-state" goes, Tim is from Nebraska, so I'm pretty sure most of his are out of state.
and Possessing Demon should go in every deck. I love it in T2, it's awesome against RTC. stick it in a Darkness and it's phenomenal.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 06:10:30 PM
Bryon, I'm not sure what value you think this measure has. Are you saying that your 2001 Nationals victory (Northeast region) was somehow better or more noteworthy than your victory in 2002 (North Central region)? Maybe I am unduly skeptical, but I am dubious that Gabe enjoyed some kind of advantage at the 2009 Nats, because the NC region is adjacent to the SW region.
LOL.  I'm sorry that wasn't clear.  I'm saying that players East of the rockies have had 14 national tournaments.  Multiple nationals have been relatively near them.  If not in their own region, at leaast within the adjacent region.  You know, one that they can travel to.  Within an all-day drive, or, say, 850 miles.

Before 2009, the closest nationals to CA was over 1600 miles away.  Not exactly within reach.

Tim said that players won at nationals outside of their region.  That's all well and good, but my point was HOW FAR out of their region?  My better question was the one that followed.  For each player on the "top player list," tell me how many national tournaments have been within 1600 miles?  Almost all of them, right?  For CA players, that number is 1.  For the majority of players on the "top players" list, the numebr of nationals even within 850 miles is probably a half-dozen at least.  I think access has more to do with placement on the list than most people here seem willing to admit.

The list is very region biased, and HIGHLY skewed against players west of the Rockies.

I do not fault Prof Underwood for the system.  Due to the nature of the national tournaments being where they have been, things are as they are.  It isn't the fault of Prof Underwood for sure.  And, to his credit, this discussion has opened a few peoples eyes to the plight of West Coasters, and brought out a few names of players here who would never have been known among the "favored half" of the country.  :)

True baseball fans acknowledge that there were stars in the negro leagues that may have been better than some of the old white baseball stars that had been lauded as "the top" players, I am hopeful that players from the East half of the US will acknowledge that there are many unsung heroes from the old west that were as good if not better than some of the top players listed above.  Otherwise, those players will forever remain underrated ONLY because they never had an opportunity to attend multiple national events, and never had an opportunity for "makeup" points by attending nearby state events.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on January 31, 2010, 06:29:13 PM
The list is very region biased, and HIGHLY skewed against players west of the Rockies.
ok, so Gabe played in CA and won everything he entered. I don't even think he's done that at a State in the NC region. So apparently, one of our best took your best head on and proved that he deserves his fame (not quite the right term for it). SoCal had their chance and failed. many other top players from the midwest were not present as well.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 06:42:15 PM
The list is very region biased, and HIGHLY skewed against players west of the Rockies.
ok, so Gabe played in CA and won everything he entered. I don't even think he's done that at a State in the NC region. So apparently, one of our best took your best head on and proved that he deserves his fame (not quite the right term for it). SoCal had their chance and failed. many other top players from the midwest were not present as well.
Apparently you completely missed my point.  Did you read my older posts, or only the one above?  CA is at a weak point in its history, as far as strength of players goes. 

In 2000-2002, we had players named Juan and Miguel Arriaga.  They were brothers.  They were very, very good.  They almost always beat me.  I went to nationals expecting players to be better than them.  They were not.  The Arriagas and Andy Siew and a couple other players would have had an easy time placing at any nationals from 2000 to 2002.

I am not talking about now.  (though if you want to talk about now, CA players represented well in all the non-Gabe events, in spite of the fact that CA players are not nearly as good now as they used to be.)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on January 31, 2010, 07:09:13 PM
The list is very region biased, and HIGHLY skewed against players west of the Rockies.
ok, so Gabe played in CA and won everything he entered. I don't even think he's done that at a State in the NC region. So apparently, one of our best took your best head on and proved that he deserves his fame (not quite the right term for it). SoCal had their chance and failed. many other top players from the midwest were not present as well.
Apparently you completely missed my point.  Did you read my older posts, or only the one above?  CA is at a weak point in its history, as far as strength of players goes. 

In 2000-2002, we had players named Juan and Miguel Arriaga.  They were brothers.  They were very, very good.  They almost always beat me.  I went to nationals expecting players to be better than them.  They were not.  The Arriagas and Andy Siew and a couple other players would have had an easy time placing at any nationals from 2000 to 2002.

I am not talking about now.  (though if you want to talk about now, CA players represented well in all the non-Gabe events, in spite of the fact that CA players are not nearly as good now as they used to be.)
I apologize for the misunderstanding. I'm still a bit ticked at CA having nats during a recession. Later would have been fine. (on a slightly related note, I would argue against your last paragraph)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 07:23:10 PM
More details for last paragraph.  CA kids placed in all the categories except Type 2.  CA players got 1st and 2nd in Type 1 multi; placed 2nd, 3rd, and 4th in teams; 2nd in Type 1 2-player; etc.  This is during a weak point in CA's history of player strength, and was against the top players in the country currently.

If you don't think it was against the top players in the country because so-and-so was missing, then THAT is exactly my point.  Nationals is ALWAYS missing some of the top players, and for 14 years in a row, that meant it was missing the top players from CA (and OR, WA).
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: STAMP on January 31, 2010, 08:09:56 PM
I support everything Bryon has been saying.  It's the same thing we in the NW have been trying to say for years.

I'm still a bit ticked at CA having nats during a recession. Later would have been fine.

Comments like this that have been made by you and others have only saddened me, and I won't deny that it's one of the many reasons I retired.  You can ask DaClock, NWJosh, 777Godspeed and others, for they all know my feelings on this subject.  A couple of years ago I was seriously conspiring hosting a West coast Nationals invitational event for all the West-coasters that can't attend the real nationals.  Call it "our" NIT to "your" NCAAs.  In the end, I decided that it might only create more hard feelings.  The East coast/West coast bias exists in all facets of life and will never change.  Hopefully there can be balance someday.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: EmJayBee83 on January 31, 2010, 08:51:06 PM
If Tim or Gabe loses at state, they can go to another state event to pick up the state points.
Depriving the players in the second state from getting their points.  And not benefiting them if they already have state points. (I would use myself as an example, since I go to multiple state tournaments--but I can't because I never win.)

Quote
Players in Southern CA can't do that, unless they drive 530+ miles to NV State (which is possible, but highly unlikely for high school kids).
And they can't lose their shot at getting "their" state points when a carpetbagger comes in and wins "their" tournament. Seems like a wash to me.

I'm still a bit ticked at CA having nats during a recession.
I would personally go with "saddened." It strikes me as completely unfair--and giving unwarranted fodder to the detractors--that the first West Coast nationals gets blamed for attendance issues well outside their control. (My only hope is that the next time Cactus looks to go out west, they give eighteen months notice.)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 09:04:45 PM
Hey,

Quote
Tim, you still didn't address my comments about winning in national events that were ADJACENT to their own region.  How many players of high school age (or younger) have won national titles in Regions not their own, and not adjacent to their own?

Technically, every region except the northeast and southeast are adjacent to the North Central Region.  Technically, six national tournaments have been held in the southwest region or a region adjacent to it.  We're really not talking about region proximity, we're talking about distance.  Using the 850 mile distance you mentioned at some point in this thread the following national titles by the candidates were won 850+ miles from their home:

Tim Maly 1/3 (new orleans)
Justin Alstad 3/4 (2x New York, 1x New Orleans)
Sam Nurge 2/2 (2x California)
Gabe Isbell 2/3 (2x California)
Joshua Hey 3/3 (2x New Orleans, 1x Pittsburgh)
Gil Kimmons 1/4 (1x Philadelphia)
Ron Sias 1/7 (1x California)
Keith Bartram 0/3

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: YourMathTeacher on January 31, 2010, 09:27:57 PM
.... and this is ultimately why the whole "Hall of Fame" idea was not handled well in the first place. We could have been all united in one cause - remembering those who should not be forgotten. We would have most likely all agreed on the qualifications and nominees, with no need for bias.

Instead, we have the same regional bias lines that we had for Nats voting, with the same animosity that lingers. I Corinthians 13 carefully defines what our love towards our Redemption brothers (and sisters  ;)  - can I just say "guys?") should look like. It appears that the "love" on these boards skipped the whole "does not take into account a wrong suffered" verse.

For those that are prepared to call me a hypocrite, you're right. I admit that I was a bit passionate about the ideal a "Hall of Fame" should have upheld. However, I am just one insignificant opinion, so have at it.

STAMP's retirement party is looking so much more inviting.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 10:37:11 PM
Hey,

So my point is validated: Andy Siew has more RNRS points than half the players on the player list.

If the only criteria was accumulation of RNRS points then yes, half the people on the list wouldn't be on the list.  Then again neither would Andy Siew because he's still 31st on that list even if you exclude nationals points.

Keep in mind that both Hey, Bartram and Sias played, and won, before the invention of RNRS.

Actually Joshua Hey played entirely during the RNRS era.  Bartram played primarily during the RNRS era, but he played in an area that didn't have many tournaments (in 2001 and 2002 tournaments in most parts of the country were very rare).  Ron Sias did win 5 national titles before the RNRS era (which would be 225 more points, but by the nationals limitation used those points wouldn't count anyway).  Ron Sias lives in a state that doesn't have a playgroup, thus the only tournaments he's attended are out of state which is largely why he doesn't have more RNRS points.

Have any of the top players picked up State points out of state?  Have any of them picked up regional points out of region?  Remove all the out-of-state state points, and out-of-region regional points from the overall rankings, and see if that makes a difference.  I don't know if that is possible, though, since it doesn't matter where you go to get your state points.  Opportunity is half the battle, and SoCA kids don't have it.

Discounting RNRS points won at Nationals, RNRS points won at Regionals other than the North Central Region and RNRS points won at Local, District, or State tournaments held outside of the state of Nebraksa, I end up with 735.5 RNRS points.  That's despite the fact that there have only been 4 State tournaments hosted in Nebraska.  Also despite winning nationals in 2004, and finishing 2nd in RNRS that year, by these requirements 0 of those RNRS points counted.

Justin doesn't travel much and has no Regional titles outside of the North Central Region so I imagine his total would be negligibly affected by the additional restriction.  A lot of Sam Nurge's points come from district tournaments, which also would not be affected by the added restriction.  I think some of Sam's state points would be affected, but I don't know how many of them.  Gabe has gotten a good number of RNRS points from other states and other regionals, so his total would be affected significantly.

If Tim or Gabe loses at state, they can go to another state (we event to pick up the state points.  Players in Southern CA can't do that, unless they drive 530+ miles to NV is possible, but highly unlikely for high school kids).

For CA players, they only get one shot.  Players on the East have multiple shots at State points within 500 miles.

Yes, in 2007 I had four shots at state points.  I won them all.  Of course, that year I had no shots at local points.  So I actually would have ended up with more RNRS points if three of those state tournaments had been local tournaments.

In 2008 I had three shots at state points (I attended a fourth state but opted to judge T1-2P rather than play in it).  I won two of them and finished 2nd in the third.  That year I only got one shot at district points.  Had one of the three states been a district rather than a state I would have ended up with more RNRS points (which would have actually bumped me into first place for the year in RNRS).

More shots at big tournaments isn't always the key to increasing lifetime RNRS points.  Often more shots at districts and locals can have a greater impact on a player's lifetime RNRS points.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 10:47:35 PM
I am sorry that I have not had the best attitude about the "top players" idea.  My first thought when I heard about the "Hall of Fame" was "uh-oh."  I tried to stay out of it.  A couple comments stepped on my proverbial toes, and I felt like I had to make a case for some players who I felt were slighted.

I completely understand why the west coast has not had many national tournaments.  I completely understand why players who live near multiple national championships would not think in concrete terms about players who have never been to one.  I am VERY thankful that Rob let us host a national event.  I am very thankful that many top dogs came to CA to compete and fellowship.  It was GREAT fun. 

I do hope that players who have had the blessing of multiple national events within a days drive will look toward giving others a similar experience.  And, that they will not think of themselves more highly than they ought, since their championships might not have been, had some better players had access to the event.

I for one have never considered myself a "top" player.  The year I went to my first nationals, I had been beat consistently all year by a couple players here: Juan and Miguel Arriaga, and there were at least a few more who were right around my level - I'd only beat them half the time.  Before I went to my next nationals, I built a couple Type 2 decks to test against a player here named Yuen.  He beat me in three consecutive games.  Then I made the trip to nationals and took first (though it could have just as easily gone to Tim that year.  He just drew more souls than I did.).  When Yuen beats me in 3 consecutive games, and I take first at nationals, I know I am not really the best in the nation.  When I get beat all year by the Arriaga brothers and go to nats and win, then I know I am not the best in the nation.  All I learned from those experiences is that CA had great players in those days (and in 1999 as well).  To have those players go ignored, while players like Keith Bartram get lauded simply because he could attend multiple nationals, just brought up feelings of sadness for the old players who never knew just how good they were.  (Well, maybe they knew.  I came home from nats with trophies 2 years in a row, and they looked at me in shock.  You!?!  Won!?!  LOL.  Then we sat down for a game and they kicked my tail.)  Maybe they did know how good they were.  Maybe I don't need to stand up for them after all.  :)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Master KChief on January 31, 2010, 11:19:17 PM
brian cooper is a top player because he threw carrots at a school bus full of nuns while in cali. at least, thats how the legend goes.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 11:22:06 PM
brian cooper is a top player because he threw carrots at a school bus full of nuns while in cali. at least, thats how the legend goes.
He did throw the carrots.  But nun of them hit the bus.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on January 31, 2010, 11:22:56 PM
^
|

Truth.

Also, didn't RNRS start in 2002? Bartram has national titles in 2000 and 2001, He retired in 04. So he really only had two years to accumulate points. Unless the Resident Historian (Tim) can correct me on that ;)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 11:23:49 PM
Hey,

I was no better of a Type 2 player than Type 1.  I had WAY more experience in Type 1.  I'd never really played much Type 2 - never in a tournament until the nats where I won my first title.  The Arriagas almost always beat me in Type 1.  So did Andy Siew.  So did a couple others from further back.  When I had success at the national tournament, I was surprised.  I thought I would have faced players better than those back home.  I did not.

Perhaps, you weren't as good in Type 1 as you were in Type 2 ;-)  If you were regularly losing to those players in Type 1 and you were winning nationals in Type 2...if the theory doesn't fit the facts...  I wish you had played Type 1 at nationals in 2002.  The field that year was very impressive, if you had won or even placed in that field it would give significantly more merit to your compliments of the California Type 1 players.  Of course, I wish we could replay our Type 2 match at nationals that year too :)

Quote
One thing I think should be awarded in the Hall of Fame are players who are at the top of their game for over 4 years.  That is something that has not really happened much in CA.  I can't help but wonder if that would have been different if those players had gained notoriety on the national scene.  Becoming respected in this great community is an encouragement to stick with the game.

I wholeheartedly agree with this.  Prof U asked me who I would have included in a list of candidates before he started the thread, one of the first names I listed was Roy Cannaday.  Technically Roy won a national title at some point (in Sealed - 2 Player I believe) but he deserved mention in my mind because of his Type 1 success outside of nationals.  He won Type 1 - 2 Player in his region 4 years in a row, and he has 10 Regional titles overall.  There are other players that haven't won nationals that are "on my radar" so to speak as far as being potential hall of fame players: Ben Shadrick, Joshua Pearson, and Ben Arp come to mind.  Each of them has a nice list of accomplishments in their own region.  California doesn't have anyone like that.  If there was a player from California that had 5+ Regional titles and was top 20 in lifetime RNRS they would likely also be on my radar (and yes I realize that Kurt meets those conditions).

Perhaps you could create a "California Hall of Fame" Bryon.  You could do little bios on the top players from California over the years.  Give the rest of us some insight into the corner of the country we don't know about, and create some more recognition for California players.  I would definitely enjoy reading that sort of thread.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on January 31, 2010, 11:30:25 PM
Hey,

Also, didn't RNRS start in 2002? Bartram has national titles in 2000 and 2001, He retired in 04. So he really only had two years to accumulate points. Unless the Resident Historian (Tim) can correct me on that ;)

Ahem, I won nationals in 2000, thank you :P  RNRS started in 2001.  Keith won nationals in 1999, 2001, and 2002.  I know he did not get any RNRS points after that, but I don't know when exactly he retired.  I know he didn't attend any national tournaments after 2002.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on January 31, 2010, 11:57:16 PM
That is a great idea.  I'd similarly like to see some from Oregon.  These would be especially great if they included pictures.  Nats has always been great since I can put a face and personality with the names on the boards.

Ever since winning that game against you, Tim, I have hung up my competetive hat.  Chris and I had a long conversation and we both admitted that the stress just isn't good for us.  I am very competetive, and used to compete in Track and Cross Country, and would get VERY nervous before races.  But at least the races would give me a physical outlet for my stress. I'd feel great after the race was over and have a 24-hour "high."  With tournaments, though, I'd still have the jitters hours after the event.  We decided to put our energies into helping Rob and making the game bigger and/or better in the ways we could (he has continued to play tournaments off and on).

I love playing with my theme decks, making up cards that will make them more playable and suggesting them to Rob.  I have a dozen Type 1 decks, most built around themes.  I have my Genesis-Rome deck, Luke-Greek deck, Purple/Teal Philistine deck, Prophets/Babylonians deck, Judges/Sadducees deck, Angels/Magicians, Daniel heroes/evil Israelites, Red/Silver Kings of Judah, Egyptians, Assyrians, Pharisees, etc., and the defenses often swap between decks as I try different things with them.  I also have an exact copy of Gabe's nats deck from 2008 that I use to test against (hence the plethora of hurt for evil splash of late).

Unfortunately, Kurt has an appreciation for the "underdeveloped" themes like the disciples.  He took a disciples/Crimson deck to nationals this year.  Seriously, his deck had nothing but discples like Peter, Andrew, Thomas, Bartholomew, James and John, and a couple N.T. females for access to the female soul.  His defense was Judas (naturally) and Red Dragon, Ananias, Sapphira, and a Zimri, I think.  I told him he wasn't going to win with it, but he already knew that.  He just wanted to see how well he could do with it (research, I guess).  He's been asking for years for better disciples.  Someday.  :)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: lightningninja on February 01, 2010, 12:13:05 AM
Hey Bryon, if that's not a secret could you send me that decklist? Ask Kurt if he'd let me use that. I'm intrigued... I'd like that theme to become competitive... I mean the significance of Disciples in the Bible warrants some competitive cards.

Back on topic, that'd be an awesome idea. If each region could do that, it'd be really cool.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on February 01, 2010, 12:17:19 AM
The more I think about it, the more I think each region should have its own "Hall of Fame."  We could skip the national Hall of Fame, except for retired contributors such as Doug Gray and Kory Lentine. 

Each region could have a section for retired players (with details of their exploits in the region), a section for winners of recent regional events (and mention if they also went on to place at nationals), and links and info about the various hosts in the region, along with their PM contact info so new players can find a tournament host close to home.  Maybe the info can be posted here on this board.

This solves the bias issue, since each region would be represented equally, regardless of the number of national events that have been hosted nearby.  It also gets more people into the list, since each region would have a couple players to start with, and that could grow each year based on voting within the region.  The only voting would be for retired players.  Recent players would be listed only for winning recent Regional events, which would change from year to year.

Any suggestions or improvements?

Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on February 01, 2010, 12:19:17 AM
I love playing with my theme decks, making up cards that will make them more playable and suggesting them to Rob.  I have a dozen Type 1 decks, most built around themes.  I have my Genesis-Rome deck, Luke-Greek deck, Purple/Teal Philistine deck, Prophets/Babylonians deck, Judges/Sadducees deck, Angels/Magicians, Daniel heroes/evil Israelites, Red/Silver Kings of Judah, Egyptians, Assyrians, Pharisees, etc., and the defenses often swap between decks as I try different things with them.  I also have an exact copy of Gabe's nats deck from 2008 that I use to test against (hence the plethora of hurt for evil splash of late).

Unfortunately, Kurt has an appreciation for the "underdeveloped" themes like the disciples.  He took a disciples/Crimson deck to nationals this year.  Seriously, his deck had nothing but discples like Peter, Andrew, Thomas, Bartholomew, James and John, and a couple N.T. females for access to the female soul.  His defense was Judas (naturally) and Red Dragon, Ananias, Sapphira, and a Zimri, I think.  I told him he wasn't going to win with it, but he already knew that.  He just wanted to see how well he could do with it (research, I guess).  He's been asking for years for better disciples.  Someday.  :)
ahh, so it's your fault that all the themes have arisen. underdeveloped ftw. look at the deacon deck, it was actually pretty good. actually, just go an all out no themes.
that fact that you didn't combine Egyptians with anything is just sick. Egyptians are one of the best evil colors, and I would venture to say best if it wasn't for ignore problems.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on February 01, 2010, 12:34:30 AM
I used to combine Egyptians with Angels, but I swapped out the Egyptians for Magicians.  I'm thinking of combining Egyptians with Red Warriors now, but I am not sure. 

OT Red goes so well with Gray Syrians, but Syrians are rather weaksauce.  Still, they'd be... unexpected.  :)

Maybe I should pair the Egyptians back with the Silver (deck discard is fun!), and mix the Magicians with Musicians, for alliteration action.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on February 01, 2010, 12:35:52 AM
You asked, I answered:

The top ten players from each region by RNRS points.
I'll let someone else handle the non-RNRS aspect

North Central:
Chris Bany
Tim Maly
Justin Alstad
Gabe Isbell
Adam Erickson
Nathan Voigt
Andrew Wester
John Nesfeder
Joshua Hey
Eric Kimmons

NorthWest Region:

Ben Arp
Josh Randolph
T.J. Stamp
Jonathan Steckmann
Scott Stamp
Jake Barone
Daniel Steckmann
Kris Graves
Stephen Fitzmaurice
Alex Mitchell

SouthWest Region:

Kurt Hake
Joseph Pfeister
Andy Siew
Jesse Pfeister
Scott Kramer
Eric Wolfe
Mike Wolfe
Brandon Abbott
Christian De Los Rios
Ben Hogue

South Central Region:

Ben Shadrick
Michael Garland
Marcus Parker
Chad Soderstrom
Aaron Burt
Matt Pinckard
Jonathan Campbell
Nathan Strong
Jordan Drott
Kyle Cox

Midwest Region:

Michael Welch
Jonathan Greeson
Matt Archibald
Wil Kludy
George Lay
Ron Sias
Brian Reid
Keith Lemke
Jonathan Pequinot
Jacob Stroh

NorthEast Region:

John Michaliszyn
Sam Nurge
Nick Archick
Mike Mendicino
Justin Sangillo
Matt Stupienski
Christian Fong
Dan Berkenpas
David Dandeneau
Ross Lang

SouthEast Region:

Eric Largent
Steve Kamke
Tyler Stevens
Chris McCravy
Drew Pegram
Jonathan Slager
Roger Arias
Daniel Whitten
Clifford Crysel
Burton Reed

East Central Region:

Roy Cannaday
Mark Underwood
Justin Cannaday
Darcy Abbott
Kirk Dennison
Chris Cannaday
Greg Mullins
James Taylor
Kyle Hostutler
David Purvis
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on February 01, 2010, 12:38:36 AM
You. are. awesome.

That was super fast!  Way to go!  It won't be too hard for players from those regions to figure out who is no longer active and perhaps vote from there.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Master KChief on February 01, 2010, 12:40:05 AM
is north central and midwest switched around? isnt kansas in the midwest region? or am i really in north central? ???
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on February 01, 2010, 12:43:51 AM
KS is in the North Central region. You can find the regional breakdown list here:

http://www.cactusgamedesign.com/red_tournament_map.php (http://www.cactusgamedesign.com/red_tournament_map.php)

I'm working on some more stats for you guys to go over.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Master KChief on February 01, 2010, 12:44:48 AM
wierd...i always thought i was in the midwest. maybe because the rest of the world does. :laugh:
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on February 01, 2010, 12:47:49 AM
Okay, so HoFers and how they measure up to their region

Keith is 21st in Midwest
Josh is listed above at 9th in North Central
Tim is also above at 2nd in North Central
Justin is 3rd in NC.
Gabe is 4th in NC
Eric (Gil) is 10th in NC
Sam is 2nd in North East Region.
Ron is 6th in Midwest
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Mr.Hiatus on February 01, 2010, 01:26:30 AM
Quote
SouthWest Region:

Eric Largent
Steve Kamke
Tyler Stevens
Chris McCravy
Drew Pegram
Jonathan Slager
Roger Arias
Daniel Whitten
Clifford Crysel
Burton Reed
We're southeast. Steve Kamke is East Central I think. Also of our list only Drew Pegram, Roger Arias (who was a great player), and Burt Reed no longer play.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red Dragon Thorn on February 01, 2010, 01:37:07 AM
Sorry, I'm tired - Fixed.

Steve is listed in the RNRS List as a member of South Carolina. South Carolina is in the South East region, while North Carolina is in East Central.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Gabe on February 01, 2010, 01:53:02 AM
Unfortunately, Kurt has an appreciation for the "underdeveloped" themes like the disciples.  He took a disciples/Crimson deck to nationals this year.  Seriously, his deck had nothing but discples like Peter, Andrew, Thomas, Bartholomew, James and John, and a couple N.T. females for access to the female soul.  His defense was Judas (naturally) and Red Dragon, Ananias, Sapphira, and a Zimri, I think.  I told him he wasn't going to win with it, but he already knew that.  He just wanted to see how well he could do with it (research, I guess).  He's been asking for years for better disciples.  Someday.  :)

Talk about a memorable moment!  Round 6 I'm paired up against Kurt who's still undefeated.  That's right, he took a Disciples deck to 5-0 at Nationals! :o  Did anyone here even think that's possible?

When Kurt played Andrew, Thaddeus & Peter, then used Freedom! during a battle, I had no idea what his game plan could possibly be.  That's a compliment because I almost always have a pretty good idea what my opponent is up to.  All I knew is that he was in the top seat and couldn't possibly be using a Disciples deck because they aren't good enough to go 5-0 at Nationals. ;)

Sadly, after using Zimri to block on his first turn, he didn't draw another evil character (Sapphira was put on the bottom of his deck by my revealer).  I walked in for 5 free souls.  It wasn't really much of a game at all.  I was very disappointed that it turned out to be "one of those games" because Kurt is obviously an amazing player to take that deck was far as he did.  He was also a great sport and walked away from that game with a smile on his face, despite getting a terrible draw.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Red on February 01, 2010, 08:44:36 AM
 1:byron can you send me that decklist?
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Warrior_Monk on February 01, 2010, 09:23:02 AM
1 guys quit all this argueing your makeing me SICK with all of the argueing if comes back up again oh it won't be pretty 2:byron can you send me that decklist?
um... we did quit arguing.

whoaa, I'm in the top ten for NC in RNRS? that's hilarious, because I haven't won yet.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Prof Underwood on February 01, 2010, 10:36:10 AM
The more I think about it, the more I think each region should have its own "Hall of Fame."
I think having regional HoFs is a great idea.  I do plan on continuing with an overall HoF as well though.  My hope is that it will continue to be a chance for people to hear about players that deserve recognition.  If there is someone who makes it into their regional HoF, I could see people then campaigning a bit to get them into the overall HoF as well.  That way players outside of that region will also gain an appreciation for their contribution to the game.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: STAMP on February 01, 2010, 11:11:52 AM
That is a great idea.  I'd similarly like to see some from Oregon.  These would be especially great if they included pictures.

I can't include pictures without approval, but starting with this list:

NorthWest Region:

Ben Arp
Josh Randolph
T.J. Stamp
Jonathan Steckmann
Scott Stamp
Jake Barone
Daniel Steckmann
Kris Graves
Stephen Fitzmaurice
Alex Mitchell

Ben Arp - One of the two best players in the NW.  He is probably the most versatile player as he has won NW events in every category.  Has been the lone NW representative at Nationals most years.  Ben always exhibits the best sportsmanship.  There are many young players who look up to Ben, in more ways than one.  I love Ben and his family dearly and treasure the opportunity I've had to know them.

Josh Randolph - One of the two best players in the NW including being the best at Type 2.  Josh is a youth pastor and has been a great leader for the kids in his youth and Redemption groups.  He is the ultimate Redemption coach.  Many kids have learned the game from Josh and gone on to be successful at tournaments.  He and his wife are two of the most gracious hosts you will ever meet.

Jonathan Steckmann - I believe Jonathan has been playing the longest of all NW players except for Ben.  He is a very deliberate player so rarely does he make a mistake.  Jonathan often beat Ben and Josh and can be considered in the top 3 in the NW.  After winning Type 1 and closed events at regionals in the past, Jonathan made the switch to Type 2 and proved it can be a seamless transition.  Jonathan and his nephew, Daniel, traveled to many NW tournaments over the years.

TJ Stamp - TJ accidentally found his niche in T1 Multi this year after years of favoring T2 and closed events.  For a few years TJ always beat Josh for the sealed deck trophy while Josh returned the favor in T2.  There rivalry was epic with no end to the trash talk and bravado.  TJ also holds the record for most times quitting and restarting the game actually selling his complete set of cards three times!

Kris Graves/Alex Mitchell - Kris and Alex were foster brothers that we met after their foster mother, Karen, contacted me about tournaments.  There were six foster brothers in the family and they all played A LOT!  Karen had one room in their big house that had folding tables set up for the boys to play Redemption.  After schoolwork and chores each boys' passion was Redemption.  Kris, Alex and Tim were the most accomplished players.  Kris was the boisterous one.  I had many a fun game playing against Kris.  One time we were both laughing so hard we almost didn't finish our match.  We nicknamed Alex the "silent assassin".  He was the quietest one of the bunch, but his game was lethal.

Jake Barone - The greatest thing about Jake is that he was saved during his Redemption career!  I will always believe that the game helped in his path home.  Jake can also be most remembered for the size of his Type 1 decks.  I tried to encourage him to use 56-63 card decks but there were too many cards he wanted to include.  Jake also had the worst luck.  He probably has the record for most close games lost when his SoG or NJ was in the next draw.

Denis Zemtsov - Denis played many of the other TCGs before he picked up Redemption.  He became a very good player very quick.  Like Alex he was very quiet.  He also had the best poker face!  Denis only had the opportunity to attend NW tournaments for a short while before he headed off to college.


Each group had many other good players.  Josh cultivated some true savants that just never got too many chances to showcase their excellence.  Although smaller in size compared to other regions, the NW has been very close-knit.  My best memories that I will carry with me forever are the multi games that Ben, Josh, TJ and I played following the conclusion of tournaments after most others had left.  By then we were running on fumes caused by sleep deprivation and hyped up on sugar and caffeine.  Those games were epic, especially for the amount of cheating and table talk that occurred!  Of course, the goal of those special games were more about how much fun we could have and not about winning or losing.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: YourMathTeacher on February 01, 2010, 05:41:45 PM
The more I think about it, the more I think each region should have its own "Hall of Fame."  We could skip the national Hall of Fame, except for retired contributors such as Doug Gray and Kory Lentine. 

I agree. This is the kind of thing we could have discussed as a group and come to agreement on. However, the "one-man show" will continue in spite of any and all opposition.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Isildur on February 01, 2010, 06:52:28 PM
Well ive finaly finished reading through this whole thread and I have to agree with almost all of what Bryon has been saying. For California the only people besides Bryon and the Wolfes who havnt gone as a family have been me (and Chris Ramesy right?) so for every one besides us there have only been one chance for those players many of whom couldnt make it to that Nationals. I played back in the hayday of the CA playgroup and Andy along some of the other players of that day were VERY good players I think I may have beaten them all maybe once each over the years of playing them. Also if you add the number of Regionals some of our SoCal players have won compared to some of the people on the other Hall of Fame list we might get some interesting numbers. I am also shocked to see my name on that list lol It seems all those old School Booster draft and Sealed games I won really add up :P On a side note some of the top players in CA have also playtested since Apostles and C/D decks that should count for something shouldnt it?
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on February 01, 2010, 10:07:59 PM
Brandan (Isildur) is a man after my own heart.  He builds cool theme decks (deacons!) and/or tests his skills with something that he knows will have little chance of winning (no cards post Apostles!), yet he somehow seems to find a way to place more often than not (hence his nice collection of RNRS points).  He has more fun at tournaments than most players, since he knows the point: fun and fellowship.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: TheKarazyvicePresidentRR on February 01, 2010, 10:12:04 PM
Does he encourage sing alongs? ;)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Bryon on February 01, 2010, 10:14:38 PM
Sing alongs?  Hmm... if Luke Wolfe gets going on the piano again, we might just have to have a spontaneous sing along... but only if Brandan brings a musician deck.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: slugfencer on February 02, 2010, 03:04:14 PM
Sorry, I'm tired - Fixed.

Steve is listed in the RNRS List as a member of South Carolina. South Carolina is in the South East region, while North Carolina is in East Central.

I live in SC, and I mostly went to North Carolina tourneys because they were about 2 hours away. I attended less Georgia tourneys because they were 4-6 hours away, so naturally I was trying to save a buck!  :)
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: soul seeker on February 02, 2010, 03:27:49 PM
FWIW:
   I'm no longer in the Midwest...I'm in the Northeast.  (I don't know what that will do with my lifetime points since...I have signed both OH and NY beside my name depending on where I was living at the time that I played at someone's tournament.)

2nd FWIW:
   This is one of many reasons why I don't like HoF....it creates elitism.  There have been a lot of board arguments since this idea first came up.  I have a pretty good guess why:   we are all competitive (hence we play a competitive card game), we all want to think of ourselves and others that we know as being great.  HoF dictates who is and is not good.  That can't be good for brotherly love.


I guess I'll just keep my noob status.
  
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: SirNobody on February 02, 2010, 03:55:39 PM
Hey,

I'm no longer in the Midwest...I'm in the Northeast.  (I don't know what that will do with my lifetime points since...I have signed both OH and NY beside my names depending on where I was living at the time that I played at someone's tournament.)   

Several players have moved from one state to another since they started collecting RNRS points.  I generally just leave the state they originally played in as the state listed with their name on the RNRS list.  If you would like me to change you to NY I can do that, but it likely won't be implemented until I make the 2010 update to the spreadsheet in August.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: Sean on February 02, 2010, 03:56:59 PM
I know one thing to be true, if people end up nominating me for the hall of fame there's got to be something wrong because, trust me, I am not worthy of such a distinction.
Title: Re: Hall of Fame - Spin off thread
Post by: soul seeker on February 02, 2010, 08:08:57 PM
Hey,

I'm no longer in the Midwest...I'm in the Northeast.  (I don't know what that will do with my lifetime points since...I have signed both OH and NY beside my names depending on where I was living at the time that I played at someone's tournament.)   

Several players have moved from one state to another since they started collecting RNRS points.  I generally just leave the state they originally played in as the state listed with their name on the RNRS list.  If you would like me to change you to NY I can do that, but it likely won't be implemented until I make the 2010 update to the spreadsheet in August.

Tschow,

Tim "Sir Nobody" Maly
Thanks for the offer Tim, but I'll just keep it as Ohio since it is very sentimental to me (from where I learned Redemption, played a lot, and have had to leave great friends).
* don't get me wrong NE players, I like you guys a lot but there is just something about where you first learn to play a game that holds a special place in the heart.
SimplePortal 2.3.3 © 2008-2010, SimplePortal