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View Full Version : IRI Final Results


Chris Fultz
19-07-2015, 10:36
67 Teams, 3 countries

Alliance Selection:
1-1730-1114-3641-0016
2-2056-1023-1806-2502
3-0118-2826-1640-67
4-0195-0033-0233-68
5-1756-0624-0330-3824
6-1310-1619-2468-4039
7-0179-0548-5254-503
8-2338-2122-0107-0234

Semi-Finalists:
8-2338-2122-0107-0234
3-0118-2826-1640-67
2-2056-1023-1806-2502
1-1730-1114-3641-0016

Finalist Alliance:
3-0118-2826-1640-67

Winning Alliance:
2-2056-1023-1806-2502
(automatic, paid entry to 2016 IRI)

Scholarships:
IFI – Luke Hart, Team 234
AndyMark – Brandon Kreitzer, Team 2338
IRI – Emily Cummings, Team 1325
Rolls-Royce – Andrew Luchenbach, Team 27

Mentor of the Year:
Eyal Hershko, Team 1657

FIRST Foundations:
Chris Noble

Volunteer of the Year:
Brett Heininger

Lip Sync Winners:
Jacob Komar
Nikki Panda

Charity:
121 Backpacks!
$3700 Auction for Riley and The Community Foundation of Howard County

Blood Drive:
20 Units Donated

cad321
19-07-2015, 12:33
What were some of the large Items at this years auction?

tindleroot
19-07-2015, 12:36
A few more wins and 2056 will practically be making a profit:D

wajirock
19-07-2015, 13:18
It's a little shocking to think that 2056 has won IRI 3 times in a row.

BrendanB
19-07-2015, 13:32
It's a little shocking to think that 2056 has won IRI 3 times in a row.

They were 3 match wins away in 2012 which would have made the streak 5 since they also won in 2011. Now that type of consistency is what makes 2056 great.

Peyton Yeung
19-07-2015, 13:56
What were some of the large Items at this years auction?
Physically there was a 3d printed chair and many of 1114's robot assemblies.

2056's gear went for over a hundred dollars.

jajabinx124
19-07-2015, 17:08
It's a little shocking to think that 2056 has won IRI 3 times in a row.

It is, but what's even more shocking is that 2056 has never won a world championship before and that they've never lost a regional(won about 22 or so in a row).

Lil' Lavery
19-07-2015, 17:40
A lot of silver for 1640 this year:
Hatboro-Horsham finalists
MAR Championship finalists
Archimedes finalists
MidKnight Mayhem finalists
IRI finalists

At least they won Seneca.

logank013
19-07-2015, 17:42
It is, but what's even more shocking is that 2056 has never won a world championship before and that they've never lost a regional(won about 22 or so in a row).

it's funny because when you ask people to name off the top 10 robots for each year, you usually hear them around 6-10. But they are very good with scouting and are just completely amazing at pulling off the wins

TDav540
19-07-2015, 18:23
It is, but what's even more shocking is that 2056 has never won a world championship before and that they've never lost a regional(won about 22 or so in a row).

I remember in Einstein Quarters this year, they got knocked out because of a dropped stack by one of their partners. If that stack had stayed, they were definitely better than both Archimedes and Curie, likely better than Hopper, and definitely could have given Newton a run for their money, if not outright win.

evanperryg
19-07-2015, 18:43
I remember in Einstein Quarters this year, they got knocked out because of a dropped stack by one of their partners. If that stack had stayed, they were definitely better than both Archimedes and Curie, likely better than Hopper, and definitely could have given Newton a run for their money, if not outright win.

They weren't better than Hopper.

It was an honor to attend IRI, and it was exciting to play with some of the greatest teams out there. In particular, I'd like to thank 2122, 107, and 234 for helping us make a strong alliance from a tough position.

Kevin Leonard
19-07-2015, 20:40
They weren't better than Hopper.

It was an honor to attend IRI, and it was exciting to play with some of the greatest teams out there. In particular, I'd like to thank 2122, 107, and 234 for helping us make a strong alliance from a tough position.

Dude your alliance was so sick. Once 5254 got knocked out, I was rooting for you guys all the way. My favorite moment has to be when your HP loaders ran out of totes to score, so 107 just popped a wheelie for the hell of it. 2122 was such a steal from that seed too.

MooreteP
19-07-2015, 21:06
My first time at this most relevant competition.
Many of the best teams elevating Recycle Rush to a place where I hope we can grudgingly respect it.

The high scores were impressive. The average score was 203, The top half averaged 221 with a standard deviation of 3 noodles, or a six stack.
The top 16 were separated by a capped six stack with a standard deviation of 2 noodles.
The bottom half averaged 184 with a standard deviation of 15.

Dropping one RC could make a difference between being selecting or hoping to be selected.
Failing to make a coopertition stack just once could drop your final rank by 8 places!


Some of the better aspects of the game theory behind Recycle Rush became more apparent: (Not that these weren't present at the CMP)

- High Scores meant obstructed views.
You needed to get the left landfill cleared first.
Watching drive teams craning their necks was humorous.
They couldn't see the clock on the other side of the field either.

- Swampthing consistently had a stack almost ready to place after autonomous.
It never occurred to me that the highest autonomous score for an alliance was 66 points.
This is doable (Wavething?)

- The game required such focus as to not make any errors. It could sometimes be like watching a downhill ski race, golf, or gymnastics. At IRI, the game was quite unforgiving.

- There is an end game in Recycle Rush. 20 seconds left and you have to decide on another tote or two versus safely placing a stack. With the tight scores here, even an uncapped 6 stack made a difference in who went to the finals. If you weren't careful your Robot would knock down a stack or two on the congested field.


Slowly wending my way home.

Oh yeah, almost forgot.
Some Fieldside Videos (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6gFDfAePtk&list=PL2jMyWIwfPDvk__KeBif_meZkDGQ3nMIy)
Five Qualifications, Two SemiFinals, Two Finals.

Kevin Leonard
19-07-2015, 22:13
My first time at this most relevant competition.
Many of the best teams elevating Recycle Rush to a place where I hope we can grudgingly respect it.

The high scores were impressive. The average score was 203, The top half averaged 221 with a standard deviation of 3 noodles, or a six stack.
The top 16 were separated by a capped six stack with a standard deviation of 2 noodles.
The bottom half averaged 184 with a standard deviation of 15.

Dropping one RC could make a difference between being selecting or hoping to be selected.
Failing to make a coopertition stack just once could drop your final rank by 8 places!


Some of the better aspects of the game theory behind Recycle Rush became more apparent: (Not that these weren't present at the CMP)

- High Scores meant obstructed views.
You needed to get the left landfill cleared first.
Watching drive teams craning their necks was humorous.
They couldn't see the clock on the other side of the field either.

- Swampthing consistently had a stack almost ready to place after autonomous.
It never occurred to me that the highest autonomous score for an alliance was 66 points.
This is doable (Wavething?)

- The game required such focus as to not make any errors. It could sometimes be like watching a downhill ski race, golf, or gymnastics. At IRI, the game was quite unforgiving.

- There is an end game in Recycle Rush. 20 seconds left and you have to decide on another tote or two versus safely placing a stack. With the tight scores here, even an uncapped 6 stack made a difference in who went to the finals. If you weren't careful your Robot would knock down a stack or two on the congested field.

I think this had to be my favorite part of Recycle Rush at this competition: seeing the game evolve more. Stack placement became more important than ever before, as to make sure your drivers can see, and so that no one drops a stack.
Watching 118 methodically make two capped and noodled stacks of 6 during eliminations was incredible. They would bring their first stack to the alliance wall to noodle, then place it against the left backstop, then place their second stack against the right backstop such that their human player could reach over and noodle it.
Part of why the 118-2826-1640 alliance made finals was due to this. 118 and 1640 could place stacks right up against one another, leaving room for Wave to easily place their stacks.

The entire finalist alliance used cans in the sideways orientation, while the entire championship alliance used them standing up. 2056 had to deal with the tipped cans, and the speed and ease with which 2056 righted them was incredible.

evanperryg
19-07-2015, 23:09
Dude your alliance was so sick. Once 5254 got knocked out, I was rooting for you guys all the way. My favorite moment has to be when your HP loaders ran out of totes to score, so 107 just popped a wheelie for the hell of it. 2122 was such a steal from that seed too.

I was really excited to see 5254 get into elims. They're a really strong team, especially considering how new they are.

I'm pretty sure 107 did that wheelie accidentally... I saw their driver taking a picture of it. I had a feeling 2122 would fall to the back of the draft, but we definitely got really lucky. As soon as my lead scout and I saw 2122 feeding the yellow totes we both yelled "THEY'RE OUT OF TOTES!" It was really exciting. From the beginning we knew we wanted to have a pair of strong feeder bots, but I didn't expect to get three strong feeder bots and 234's god of a human player. Our first semifinal match is going to haunt me, though...

So much awesome stuff happened at IRI. Thanks to 1023 for scouting with us- we couldn't have assembled the Blue It Tatorboticsward alliance without that data. It was really exciting to see 1657, they definitely lived up to all of the pre-season hype. 179 got really, really good at landfill. They were one of the first teams to wipe out the landfill at IRI, and there's something to be said for that. And, even though we got knocked out, our friends at 1023 and 2826 advanced and we saw some amazing finals matches.

Oh, 1756: I would have said yes... too bad I had an alliance to manage :D

CJ_Elliott
20-07-2015, 11:24
On multiple occasions teams ran out of totes from the HP... that is impressive on a lot of levels. It is especially impressive to see teams good enough that a noodle could be the difference because the 7 capped stacks were there for sure.

The other Gabe
20-07-2015, 12:09
it's funny because when you ask people to name off the top 10 robots for each year, you usually hear them around 6-10. But they are very good with scouting and are just completely amazing at pulling off the wins

People always underestimate the scouts :D

FRCmediaMan
21-07-2015, 20:01
Even though a lot of us didn't like this year at all it was actually entertaining to watch all the six stacks go up. Coming out of Florida events where it was something to see 1 maybe 2 stacks. It was actually really cool to see so many stack go up.

We might have got knocked out in the quarters by world record scores but we were the 7 seed alliance captains when we where predicted to be one of the worst bots in the event. :D

Also I loved seeing people react to our robots improvements. :ahh: