ReneDescartes wrote on 02/14/18 at 12:05:21:
The player who restarted the clock was, as I was later told, himself an arbiter. He knew it was wrong. This was poor sportsmanship, not ignorance.
I have had and seen so many instances of poor sportsmanship and cheating that it really soured me on playing competitively for long lengths of time. One of the worst that happened to me directly went like this:
In a small local evening tournament, I was paired against a TD who ran most local events, though he was playing in this one and someone else was acting as arbiter. This was when I was rated about 2150 or so and really trying to make a climb to 2200, whereas my opponent was only rated about 1750 or so.
My opponent had the Black pieces and some kind of digital clock that I wasn't familiar with at the time (this was perhaps 8 years ago), though I don't remember the make. Time control was G/60 or G/75, with 5-second delay. Because I wasn't familiar with the clock, before the game I asked my opponent how to operate it, how to stop it in case I needed to, and made sure that the delay was working. It all was. The one slightly odd thing that I noticed was that there was a move counter set as though there was a time control at move 40, but he showed me that the "second" time control was set for 0 minutes, so that there wasn't any additional time coming; he said that he didn't know how to change the mode, and I thought nothing of it.
My opponent played well for a while, but finally made some kind of error after 30 or 40 moves or so that I capitalized on. Soon he was down a piece, some pawns, then a queen for a rook...eventually, after many moves, my opponent only had king and pawns whereas I had two pieces and pawns, with one of them queening shortly. I expected my opponent to resign, but he didn't. That's fine; I assumed that he was hoping for stalemate as all of his pawns were locked and he only had king moves. I was also down under two minutes while he had about ten, but with the delay I knew that I was fine.
At this point my opponent started behaving really badly: he pounded the table, huffed loudly, picked his king up and slammed it into the board while hitting the clock very hard instantly on every move, etc. He was also staring intently at the clock. I glanced at the clock a few times and saw that I had more than a minute and, with the delays, should be completely fine on time.
So instead of "stooping to his level," I tried to play very "politely," taking a few seconds to move, adjusting his king (which was never in the center of a square), that sort of thing. I deliberately took 3-5 seconds or so per move, just to make sure that I wasn't going to queen into stalemate, or otherwise inadvertently stalemate my opponent. My opponent still stared intently at the clock.
To my astonishment, with mate only a couple of moves away, my opponent triumphantly screamed "FLAG!!". And he was correct; my clock had expired. I had no idea how it happened, I protested to him, asked to see the delay, etc. The TD had been watching our board from some distance off and said that my time had expired. He also said that the clock didn't seem to have any delay! I protested, saying that I had been shown the delay working before the start of the game, which my opponent denied. I was also told that even if the delay had somehow stopped working, that it was my responsibility to notice that before my time expired.
So I lost the game, which left a huge sour taste in my mouth, set me back quite a ways on the road to Master, and turned me off from playing for a while. My opponent was one of the most prominent local TDs, and he knew full well that he had demonstrated the delay to me before the game began.
What I believe happened was that the second time control was NOT set to have delay. Whether that was intentional on his part I do not know; at best, he noticed that the clock was not set correctly and did nothing about it so that he could win on time after having misled me before the game. At worst, he deliberately removed the delay after the second time control in an attempt to flag his opponents who likely would not notice. Given his personality as I came to know him better, I suspect the latter.
Anyhow I'm venting a bit, but I want to warn people that there are all sorts of ways to cheat that we may not have thought of and take us by surprise. The instance still bothers me this many years later, and it was one of a few that really soured me on competitive rated play, unfortunately.