View Full Version : History of Team Spirit
Steve Howland
15-01-2006, 01:39
Team spirit at competitions has grown dramatically throughout FIRST over the years, and the spirit group on my team would like to know a little bit about how it all began. This "Spirit Campaign" is intended to help spread FIRST spirit at competitions, including a pamphlet, plenty of pictures, and other spirit-related items. If anyone could post answers to the following questions about spirit, it would be greatly appreciated!
Has the Spirit Award always been around?
Which teams have been spirited since the beginning?
Who had the first costumes/mascots? First identifiable teams? First cheerleaders? First hugs?
Why does it seem to go with robotics so well?
Thanks!
KenWittlief
15-01-2006, 01:45
I dont know if it has really grown over the years? The 1st event I attended, Rutgers in 1997, a teacher advised me "bring earplugs"!
"Why?"
"You'll find out".
Uniforms and colorfull hats and team pins, and team cheers on the front steps before the doors opened at 9AM on thursday morning were already well established by then.
Why does it seem to go with robotics so well?
robotics and spirit go together well because they both help inspire many people. having a good team vibe helps everyone feel better. FIRST inspires many kids/adults/anyone and having spirit squads and all the team identity aspects in robotics just completes the whole setting. =]
Andy Baker
15-01-2006, 11:17
I am not sure about this, but I *think* that the TechnoKats (team 45) were the first team to hand out team buttons and pins to other teams. This was in 1994 or 1993.
Andy B.
KenWittlief
15-01-2006, 12:30
The Xcats (191) attended the 1st FIRST competition (and won the Chairmans award). Im pretty sure they have video of the event at their facilities. We should bug them to host it on their website, seeing how only a handfull of the original teams are still around.
It was pretty interesting to watch, to compare to the way events are now.
The infamous MOE sticks (which new students may not know) started in 2000 when several students were using sticks to cheer on the team testing the robot at our build site. (You can hear them at http://www.moe365.org/sounds.php) They were then painted with green and black stripes and used by the whole team at competitions to help cheer. They were banned in 2004. In 2002 or so the team passed out MOE-mints candy at the regionals. They were banned the next year. In 2004 the 25 ft tower first appeared. This was a (bright green of course) tower at our pit, with a camera on top providing live shots of the floor below. Note that tall structures are banned now in the pits. Is this a trend?
They can't ban our dancing team however!
Bharat Nain
16-01-2006, 13:45
I think team spirit seems to go so well with robotics is because we see it as a normal sport and therefore cheering is encouraged. Different teams picked up on this and have given different aspects to team spirit(buttons, coloring hair, coloring face, crazy hats, awesome dances). This also makes the competition fun and appealing. Who[spectator] would want to go to a dull competition just because two robots are moving on the field doing something they don't understand. Team spirit is a necessity.
Ianworld
16-01-2006, 14:17
Carol, that was a sad post, sorta. MOE has always amazed me with their team spirit. At nationals last year I was always overjoyed and happy to be driving knowing full well that the MOE stick figure crowd was there cheering me on in their own silent manner. (Seriously that was awesome) I was lucky enough to catch the moe sticks in their last year. It was also the year that I found out about MOE ear plugs. :)
As for the history if cheering I can't tell you much having only been around for 5 years. I can't say its changed much over the past 5 years. Maybe some teams have gotten more extravagant. I was impressed with PINK's giant robot suit they showed up with in NYC two years ago(same goes with the full pink body paint.) I really wanted to make a giant robot suit after that. They're were a bunch wandering around nationals though, so I guess its been around for a bunch of years.
I know my team has always had a plethora of goodies to give out. We've done everything from yo-yo's to I think our coolest, limited edition stuypulse 7/16th wrenches. :)
The Xcats (191) attended the 1st FIRST competition (and won the Chairmans award). Im pretty sure they have video of the event at their facilities. We should bug them to host it on their website, seeing how only a handfull of the original teams are still around.
It was pretty interesting to watch, to compare to the way events are now.
I'm trying to load it up onto Google Video but it's massive and it never quite loads all the way up.
Team 571 is researching and gathering historical data on the growth and spread of SPIRIT. We would like to hear from FIRST Team members and Mentors that experienced this movement through the FIRST community.
I looked at pictures from the 1st competition in N.H. "Maize Craze", did not see any form of team or FIRST Spirit. So, when and where and by whom? Who made the 1st button? Who had the first goofy hat?
If you have competition pictures of the early years with proof that your team started it all, please send them in.
Thanks,
Team Paragon Spirit MOM :)
Bill Moore
16-01-2006, 22:43
Team 571 is researching and gathering historical data on the growth and spread of SPIRIT. We would like to hear from FIRST Team members and Mentors that experienced this movement through the FIRST community.
....Who made the 1st button? ...
I'm not sure the first give-away was a button. There were some very creative items shared in the 2000 to 2002 period. (Didn't the X-Cats give away "Swedish Fish" candy in bags labelled as Cat Food in 2001?)
I was just digging through the box of FIRST tchotchkes the other day looking to see if I had another of the Ford shoulder straps to carry water bottles. (I didn't.) I couldn't help but notice the diversity of items that were given out in past years. Now it seems that 95+% of the handouts at competitions are buttons. I don't know if that is because FIRST has banned some of the items (food in particular), or if buttons are so much easier/quicker than doing something more unique.
Ianworld
17-01-2006, 02:28
I don't think its that other items have become less popular I just think that buttons have become sort of a common denominator. Any team that is capable of creating a couple hundred buttons seems to make them. Its a good thing to in my opinion, almost like playing cards for every FIRST team. I still have my massive chain of buttons from my first nationals. It just blew me away and i'll probably never throw them out. So as I was saying, there are still lots of unique items. They're just hidden behind a sea of buttons.
Anothe reason perhaps has to do with the popularity of FIRST. Almost everything costs more than a button to make. With so many people attending competitions now and so many people wanting the giveaway(who doesn't love free stuff!) that teams have to give something away thats cheap and easy. I know my team has buttons always(we bought something like 5000 two years ago with just our logo on it at a really cheap per piece price) but that to people that are really interested and to other teams we're maybe tyring to get picked by(great diplomacy method ;)) we give the good stuff to. When somebody picks up and uses a 694 wrench they think, yeah that team is pretty is cool. :)
Well, to be fair the MOE sticks were loud and hurt some people's ears (hence the earplugs). And I can understand FIRST banning loud, annoying noisemakers, tall structures, and food freebies for safety reasons. But the best noisemakers are still the people themselves. Cheering, dancing, applauding for your team and others is still the highly encouraged.
On the other hand, FIRST bans do increase creativity. I can't wait to see how many teams have exactly 10 foot tall pits. And new noisemakers and mascots are popping up every year. I remember a team at Nationals (can't remember who) last year with some interesting shaking type noisemakers. And MOE is still making wobblies - discovered serendipitously by a student last year who was playing around with a sheet of plastic.
I would like to challenge all teams to come up with Spirit aids that don't violate FIRST rules! Let's see what you can do! (After your robot is shipped of course).
dk5sm5luigi
17-01-2006, 09:52
I looked at pictures from the 1st competition in N.H. "Maize Craze", did not see any form of team or FIRST Spirit.
From watching the finals videos of 1992 there was a lot of team spirit. When I saw it 2 years ago I was surprised how much team spirit has stayed the same since 1992.
As for team spirit I think it has gone down a little (at least in NE) over the past several years. In 1997 and 1998 when the regional was in New Hampshire there were shouting cheers (We've got spirit, etc.) going across the gymnasium and everyone was involved. When the competition was moved to Hartford teams tried to continue this but Meadows was a terrible spectator arena and noise didn't travel that well. The one year the competition was in New Haven the team spirit seemed to pick up and I think this is because it was easy to have cheer wars across the field.
What I would like to know is which team was first to have a pep band. I know the team which is currently 155 (Technonuts from Berlin, CT) had a pep band in 1996 and every year after that until they were made illegal.
kborer22
17-01-2006, 12:02
team spirit goes so well because of the pride that everyone in first takes in what they accomplished! The first year that i actually built something that ended up on the robot was one of the proudest moments of my life. Just seeing somethign that your put blood sweat and tears into compete and hopefully suceed on a regional or national level is just amazing. Another goal of dean and woody was to promote teamwork, and i think that everyone can relate to how truly difficult this can be. Team spirit is a celebration of everyone surviving the 6 weeks with out killing eachother. The relationship you build with your teammates during the 6 weeks caries over as well, usually the more spirit the closer the team. I was on team 11 for the past 3 year(currently team 125) and when i started there was not much there in the way of spirit. As we came togeather as a team, and really felt confident in what we had built and accomplished each build season the team moral went up. Once you get a little taste of sucess, either winning an award, or just being complimented by the judges its amazing how quickly you can build spirit.
Team spirit is all about having fun. People at work don't understand why I have a little yellow rubber Thunderchicken hanging on my wall, a collection of little LEGO people on my monitor, a bone with "173" written on it... but when I'm having a tough day I just have to glance at these odd objects and I am instantly brought back to Hartford or Houston or Atlanta... The days of the MOEsticks may be gone but they will live on in FIRST history, along with other team spirit items that will take their place.
Josh Murphy
17-01-2006, 13:43
team spirit is all about coming together as a team and forming a bond. being on the same page with every one on the team is ideal. you could start by asking what does your team want to do and how they want to be spirited. we normally cheer, use shakers(made out of empty waterbottles, with popcorn seeds or beads), dance and just come together as a team. another thing that plays a role in why we team 47 get so many spirit awards is our diversity. spirit is but isn't about who or who is not the loudest. spirit is about how your team reflects what first is all about. last year we won the national spirit award in Atlanta but we were kind of outcheered. but there were so many roles that we filled that put us over the top. we walked around the georgia dome cheering if anybody recalls but that did not help we were courteous in the pit we showed the example of safety and common courtesy we were diverse and we bonded with each other for great teamwork. Our team usually does drills in the offseason meetings and that kind of gels us together so you guys should consider some of these things it might work. :) :) :rolleyes:
2005 spirit of the competition western michigan regional
2005 national spirit award in atlanta
KenWittlief
17-01-2006, 13:56
I think its more than just teamwork and bonding.
There are two phases to this program. We start off separately, designing and building our bots, each team at their own location. You get a great deal of satisfaction when you see your bot doing what you designed it to do, then crate it up and ship it off. A very real sense of completion and accomplishment right there.
But then you get to your 1st event, and you walk around and see all the different robots, all the different ideas, all the different people from around the world who have taken on the same problems and challenges
its as if the time and energy we have all put into our machines all comes together and takes on a life of its own. The thousands of man-hours we have put into our designs is all focused in a 130 second match.
Team spirit - thats what defines it for me - our collective invested life-force over the last two months is combined, and it explodes into the arena!
Josh Murphy
17-01-2006, 14:09
yeah our engineer mr aubry and our coach mr martus always tell us that when we are at the hotel and having our routine nightly meetings. they always say "cmon guys this is your machine be proud of what you have done and cheer for it what did you build it for" and i agree with them because when our robot is out on the field i feel like a million dollars because i have put so much time and effort in it and you just want to cheer
artdutra04
17-01-2006, 14:59
As for team spirit I think it has gone down a little (at least in NE) over the past several years. In 1997 and 1998 when the regional was in New Hampshire there were shouting cheers (We've got spirit, etc.) going across the gymnasium and everyone was involved. When the competition was moved to Hartford teams tried to continue this but Meadows was a terrible spectator arena and noise didn't travel that well. The one year the competition was in New Haven the team spirit seemed to pick up and I think this is because it was easy to have cheer wars across the field.Hopefully this will pick up again, seeing that the UTC New England Regional isn't at the Meadows anymore, but rather at the new Connecticut Convention Center. :cool:
As for team spirit, if you watch this video (http://sea.cs.jhu.edu:8001/usfirst/1993vids/) from the 1993 Competition, the level of team spirit is more than evident. The level of team spirit then was probably as much as it is now. :)
Hopefully this will pick up again, seeing that the UTC New England Regional isn't at the Meadows anymore, but rather at the new Connecticut Convention Center. :cool:
As for team spirit, if you watch this video (http://sea.cs.jhu.edu:8001/usfirst/1993vids/) from the 1993 Competition, the level of team spirit is more than evident. The level of team spirit then was probably as much as it is now. :)
It's funny watching FIRST in the past and the Championship was no bigger than an off season event.
It really has grown in leaps and bounds.
scifi3018
18-01-2006, 01:25
I remeber my first competition in FL at the epcot center in 2001 (i think) and there was so much spirit. It was just 2 tents in a parking lot, but the comradity, and freindship among the teams was amazing, one team asked to interview us to find out about our robot and had a little lounge in the corner of the tent with bean bag chairs, there was a team with a large twister board set up which was easily one of the most fun things at the competition (besides the robots of course).
I didnt get to see any spirit that i liked beter than my first year, although 2 years later in the palmetto regional, the spirit was amazing. And the year after that, and hopefully this year also (yay for mentors)
grillachief05
18-01-2006, 10:30
Spirit when we think of Spirit all of us through out FIRST think that it about cheering in the stands or wild t-shirts or jewelry of buttons. That is what our outward experssion of spirit. But true spirit is when you unified with you team when you don't see your team as a team but a family. First is all about family. Our spirit is outward at competition but spirit starts from the first day you join and team and never ends until the day you die.
It's funny watching FIRST in the past and the Championship was no bigger than an off season event.
It really has grown in leaps and bounds.
:ahh: Great job Koko ED, the video is amazing. I will shared it with my Spirit group. Especially, with our engineers they will be greatful.
THANK YOU!
Marygrace :)
:ahh: Great job Koko ED, the video is amazing. I will shared it with my Spirit group. Especially, with our engineers they will be greatful.
THANK YOU!
Marygrace :)
Thanks but the credit goes to team 228, not I.
I'm trying to see if I can get the 1992 file uploaded (141 meg might not take).
artdutra04
18-01-2006, 15:49
Thanks but the credit goes to team 228, not I.
I'm trying to see if I can get the 1992 file uploaded (141 meg might not take).Actually... the credit goes to Venkatesh from the 1993 Rug Rage (http://www.firstwiki.org/Rug_Rage) article in http://www.firstwiki.org. The link to the video is from there. I just reposted the link here for everyone to see. :)
Excelsior
18-01-2006, 17:27
I think the cheering comes naturally. If people can go to a sporting event and cheer on their team with all that energy just because that team happens to be from their town, why not cheer on something that you put blood, sweat, and tears into? (Just... not in the electronics, please.)
I remember my team's first year, our robot was somewhat pitiful (hey, it ran) but we cheered hard that year. We hadn't thought to bring anything to help cheer, but we cheered anyway to see our creation competing. (In a manner of speaking.)
I think euphoria is natural when you see something you worked on do what it's supposed to. (Finally.)
Squirt_47
19-01-2006, 14:33
Well last championship when we won (Chief Delphi), we were all so surprised no one on our team thought we would even come close to winning the national spirit award. The feeling you get when your team is annouced your heart feels like it droped. I know alot of other teams deserved to win it and i wonder why our team was picked. Spirit keeps the competition going and makes things more fun then they already are. you also get to meet more interesting people and that is always cool. :p :yikes:
Thanks but the credit goes to team 228, not I.
I'm trying to see if I can get the 1992 file uploaded (141 meg might not take).
Got it! (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-147783057553890710)
KenWittlief
20-01-2006, 23:33
Got it! (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-147783057553890710)
^ WOW! that has to be the greatest FIRST documentary video ever
and its all right there, in the very first year - and people picked up on it - the teamwork, the sportsmanship, having a greatest time doing the hardest work youve ever done
one person in the video even called it out specifically, "an intangible spirit" that developed on the team
its also great to see all the people in that first year who have influenced so many people and teams over the years: Gene Wicks, Ron Duke (looking very Jr :^), Christeen, and did I see Peter Debbs (Jeffs Debbs brother? founder of a team in Rochester?)
so many connections.
Feb 13th, 1992 Manchester NH -its on my list now - when I get my time machine done, thats one of the places I have to go :^)
and by the way, who was that kid with the beard who looks like Dean Kamen?
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