View Full Version : Jockeying for position
FIRST has addressed the problem of teams fighting over starting position by making the lower seeded alliance set up on the field first. This solution works well at the regionals, and will be fine in the division finals, but there are potential problems when the "final four" division champions come together. It is possible in these matches for two alliances with the same seed ranking to come play one another. FIRST needs to set a precedent for determining who sets up first in this scenario, otherwise we very well could have some bad backs from team members moving their robots side to side during pre-match setup.
Any thoughts and possible solutions?
Rob
Peter Matteson
11-04-2004, 23:28
In that case the reasonable way to do it would be by the flip of coin or other equal opportunity method of chance since both teams are equally deserving. Other ways they could do it are to go to regional competion results to determine a higher seed but that method is not necessarily "fair". In fact going by the divisional seeding results isn't necessarily fair either in my opinion because your rankings are not from playing the same teams so they really don't correlate. I would suggest the afforementioned coin flip or drawing divison names from a hat to level the playing field.
Collin Fultz
11-04-2004, 23:50
In that case the reasonable way to do it would be by the flip of coin or other equal opportunity method of chance since both teams are equally deserving. Other ways they could do it are to go to regional competion results to determine a higher seed but that method is not necessarily "fair". In fact going by the divisional seeding results isn't necessarily fair either in my opinion because your rankings are not from playing the same teams so they really don't correlate. I would suggest the afforementioned coin flip or drawing divison names from a hat to level the playing field.
i like the coin flip idea. this seams to be the most fair...if of course anything is fair...but then one must ask...who gets to call the coin toss? oh we are in quite the connundrum. What if woody wrote a number between 1 and infinity down and each team guessed a number and whoever was closest won (or 1-10 if you're into that kind of thing) that gives each alliance a chance to guess...but who guesses first? i guess it's all going to come down to gracious professionalism and accepting things as they are. if your alliance is deserving enough to win national championships...you should be able to withstand picking first or second.
the number picking gets my vote.
after re-reading the post before mine...i like the drawing names from a hat idea
jimfortytwo
12-04-2004, 00:00
Why couldn't you just have both teams pick first?
(have a staging official ask each team where they intended to set up, without telling them what the other team had declared)
Collin Fultz
12-04-2004, 00:03
Why couldn't you just have both teams pick first?
(have a staging official ask each team where they intended to set up, without telling them what the other team had declared)
this is an interesting point. it just may work. plus with good scouting one can kind of predict where a team will want to set up...of course...this means scouting every division and every team (295 in all) or some kind of scouting network.
[QUOTE=collin234] if your alliance is deserving enough to win national championships...you should be able to withstand picking first or second.
[QUOTE]
Exactly...I got to reading this post, and thinking about the current system at the regionals and how 8 is first paired with 1. I was about to respond how that was unfair, then I got to thinking that if they were to ever win, they would have to beat everyone else. The first position is also not necesarily the best alliance. Some robots get lucky in partners/opponets, and get up there without much work at all.
Why couldn't you just have both teams pick first?
(have a staging official ask each team where they intended to set up, without telling them what the other team had declared)
/me smacks self in forehead
Duh! Sometimes the simplest answers are the best ones!
-dave
Collin Fultz
12-04-2004, 00:17
/me smacks self in forehead
Duh! Sometimes the simplest answers are the best ones!
-dave
so is this an official answer? or are we just gonna have to wait and see (please oh please be official.) :)
Why couldn't you just have both teams pick first?
(have a staging official ask each team where they intended to set up, without telling them what the other team had declared)
This is what the rule was suppossed ot do, and it was put in place in responce for the time delay due to 2 teams in the national finals last year jockeying from side to side and not just setting up, yet waiting for the other alliance to place first. Hope it doesnt occur again.
Maybe FIRST should make a coin with one red side and one blue side and let the head ref flip it prior to any match between two alliances of simmilar seeding.
Rob
Peter Matteson
12-04-2004, 07:44
Maybe FIRST should make a coin with one red side and one blue side and let the head ref flip it prior to any match between two alliances of simmilar seeding.
Rob
This is the type of coin flip I was refering to. In wrestling they do this with a red/green coin and the winner chooses staring position for the 2nd round, while the other person chooses starting position for the third round. (For those who don't know neutral position is used for round 1 always.) This way no one has a chance to call the flip for an advantage.
being able to set up second, after your opponents set up is an advantage, this way you can counter act an auto mode they may use frequently.
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