John Danker
Administrator
I'm growing a little tired of just about every player in a major tournament who doesn't do well blaming their poor performance on everything but themselves. I read the boards and listen to them at the tournaments and all I hear is, "The guy was staking his deck." or "He luck sacked on me and got..blah blah." or "If I played him 3 matches rather than 3 games he'd never be able to beat me." or "The T.O. screwed up the pairings." on and on and on....
I realize it's a pretty mature concept....but I'd love to hear the following types of comments once in a while....
"I made a couple of poor decisions and it cost me the match."
"I don't feel I have a poor deck or I'm a bad player, karma just wasn't on my side today. I'm sure it'll change next time."
"We're both good players, I drew poorly starting out and he drew well, he got the jump on me and I tried to fight my way back but he kept the pressure on and I couldn't recover."
"I wasn't prepared for his deck, I was playing to the current meta and his deck addressed mine very well. I didn't even have anything in my side deck to help me out. It was a good lesson learned and I'll certainly makes some changes to my side deck to counter that in the future."
" I must admit, today, he was certainly the better player. He really hand his game on."
Part of growing up is taking responsability for your own actions and the results of your efforts. You're more likely to gain respect and you'll certainly show more class and be viewed as an individual if you have the audacity to just tell it like it is rather than making up excuses folks.
I realize it's a pretty mature concept....but I'd love to hear the following types of comments once in a while....
"I made a couple of poor decisions and it cost me the match."
"I don't feel I have a poor deck or I'm a bad player, karma just wasn't on my side today. I'm sure it'll change next time."
"We're both good players, I drew poorly starting out and he drew well, he got the jump on me and I tried to fight my way back but he kept the pressure on and I couldn't recover."
"I wasn't prepared for his deck, I was playing to the current meta and his deck addressed mine very well. I didn't even have anything in my side deck to help me out. It was a good lesson learned and I'll certainly makes some changes to my side deck to counter that in the future."
" I must admit, today, he was certainly the better player. He really hand his game on."
Part of growing up is taking responsability for your own actions and the results of your efforts. You're more likely to gain respect and you'll certainly show more class and be viewed as an individual if you have the audacity to just tell it like it is rather than making up excuses folks.