(Jan. 19, 2022 2:10 AM)th!nk Wrote:(Jan. 19, 2022 1:49 AM)MagikHorse Wrote: It's hard to tell in that clip, Dynamite blocks the view of Vanish to much and obscures the answer, but not to worry. Thanks to some recent tournament footage, I can do you one better.
I'll point you to a scene starting around 2:22 and ending at about 2:49. Who won that match? Officially, and in accordance with WBO rules, Greatest Raphael won the match because Dynamite+F Perseus leaned over enough to start "rolling", even though Dynamite continued visibly rotating by a very visible amount afterwards. That doesn't make much sense at all.
Oh yeah, did I mention that was tournament footage? That's official stuff. BuilderRob lost a point in deck format when anyone would reasonably say he should have won. This isn't just theorycrafting anymore, this is a real official ruling at an official event. This is what "rolling" does.
That's an absolutely wack call, especially as you can see in slow mo that dynamite rotates around it's central axis by a good amount after gr stops. Great example of why this rule needs to go, in what world is GR the last bey standing? I could maybe see it called as a draw but a GR win? What?
You wanna know why it's even more whack? You can start rolling and then stop rolling later. You can see it trying to climb the stadium's slope as Dynamite dies. At that time the roll had ended, and spinning resumed as it tried to accelerate upwards. It just didn't have the traction to succeed, but since it rolled earlier it had already stopped spinning and therefore already lost, unable to resume. This behavior isn't unusual either, it happens quite often on certain parts (especially Tapered from Burst).
Really, a "roll" by the WBO current definition is just an unstable spin that can't keep itself upright. It's an elaborate penalty for losing your stability, unless you're on a free-spinning tip of course. It's not a good measure of when a spin stops.