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Re: The Rest Of The Best
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Re: The Rest Of The Best
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Want to win? Build a better bot! (And I say this as the lead mentor of a team that almost always falls short of where we want to be... The current system really pushes us to do more, and do it better.) |
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also maybe only teams who call the championship the championship should get championship bids /s :rolleyes: |
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Yes, I know that teams that are chosen do deserve to go, but that doesn't mean there are other teams that haven't earned their shot even more. And yes, I know that some awards can qualify you. I'm mostly concerned with the fact that the first "super alliance" wins the vast majority of the time, despite the fact that there are many teams that could get to St. Louis had the alliances been more balanced. |
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Re: The Rest Of The Best
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This year, it's been crazy just how many #1 seeds get knocked out early. I don't have any hard numbers on me, but there have been a lot more lower-seeded alliances than normal winning regionals. Even the 1114-2056 juggernaut had a scare in the GTR-E semis. And Art is correct, to my knowledge. I've heard the same thing. I've also heard that they tried assigning partners to the top 8, something like the top 8 got the next 8 in order. Also didn't work out, for reasons I don't remember hearing (but probably similar). |
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To answer your question EricH, both regionals I went to (Davis and SVR) were won by the first alliance. |
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Also, nobody goes to anything called "nationals," that I know of. |
Re: The Rest Of The Best
Oftentimes the team picked by the number one seed is better than the number one seed. The way seeding works, especially this year, we may not have the best team seed first. I think it has been determined in analysis by others that the number one indicator of success was being picked by the number one alliance. Second was being number 1 seed.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like overall, the first two teams on the 1st alliance are most deserving. |
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There have been many times when the number one seed has, according to some opinions, been carried to their place. In these cases, they will ask teams to join their alliance and be declined. So your point that winning a regional depends on being picked by the first seed is completely blown apart by these circumstances. Also, it's pretty outrageous to tell teams that, because they won a regional alongside the #1 seed, that their accomplishment has nothing to do with their hard work and time and effort that they put in. I have to agree with Akash when he said that it sounds a bit like you're jealous. How can we tell which teams supposedly "earned their shot even more"? That's a very dangerous road to go down... The idea that you think you can even tell a team that you deserve to go to championships more than they do, despite them qualifying, is absurd and downright offensive to those teams. |
Re: The Rest Of The Best
-Statistically the number 1 seed wins about 70% of the time.
-The number 7 seed wins almost never (because they have to play the #1 #2 and #3 seed in order to win.) These results are derived from data over the course of many years by our coach Jim Zondag. The real problem is not that the best teams always win. It's that the current system rewards only the winners. Everyone else gets NOTHING; this is stupid. This is recognized by FiM and is why we have a point system where if your really good but get beat by 67 or the like at all your events you still have the ability to qualify for worlds. There is also something to be said for allowing only the best teams to go to worlds. No matter what someone is going to be excluded. The real qustion is who? And if team A worked really hard and got a finalist award at both their regionals and teams B pre-pays and builds a robot that doesn't even make it into elimination who really deserves to be there? This is basically happening every year, teams who can't effectvely play the game go to worlds while good teams that get beat by the best teams are left out in the cold. IMHO that needs to change. |
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Seeding first is typically a lot of skill and a little luck, so I don't see a problem with them getting the best date to the big dance. :) |
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Bayou 2009 (Alliance 4, 1st Pick): Bayou's never been known to be a deep regional; 499 was a pretty good dumper, but we also got paired with a purely defensive robot in 2206. The #4 alliance, we reach the semifinals before losing in three to the #7 seed. Palmetto 2009 (Alliance 1, 1st Pick): We're picked by the #1 seed first; their empty-cell hauler had effectively zero offensive firepower. They pick 1379 next. The lack of firepower and a few mechanical issues on 1379's robot hobble us come finals. We lose in two to the #4 alliance. Palmetto 2010 (Alliance 2, 1st Pick): We get drafted by the #2 seed in 1379, then we pick a defender in 1293. Quarterfinals go well enough, but then 1293 blows a component deep inside their drivetrain. They think they've got it fixed, but we get knocked out in the semis in two at the hands of the #5 seed. Peachtree 2011 (Alliance 1, 2nd Pick): We're playing alongside the consensus top two robots at the event in #1 2415 and #3 1771. Everyone's firing on all cylinders for almost the entire run. Champions, 6-0 through the bracket. Palmetto 2011 (Alliance 1, 2nd Pick): We once again go to the last pick, playing with two of the strongest robots there in #1 180 and #2 2363...but we also run into a couple of electrical issues that cause us to stop for a few seconds at a time (but, fortunately, in pretty good locations to slow our opponents). It takes three matches in the finals, but we win here too. Peachtree 2012 (Alliance 1, 2nd Pick): 1311 and 1771 slugged it out for #1 seed, with the former winning out in a late head-to-head qualification match and picking the latter. We go in as the last pick, but 1771 (the #2 seed, and I'd say the shooting muscle of the alliance) runs into issues with their drive and camera systems. We get upset hard in the quarterfinals in three, courtesy of the #8 alliance. Palmetto 2012 (Alliance 2, Backup): 281's shooter breaks beyond a quick repair in quarters, so they call their timeout before their first semifinal match and in we go on the #2 alliance. The first match in, we don't move--a wire got loose--and we lose the match. Fix the wire, and we fire off four straight, convincing wins. Back-to-back regional champions in two. The reason for this history lesson? If you're in the elimination rounds anywhere, you have a real shot at winning the regional. "Super alliances" have robots break just as easily as teams that sneak into the #8 captain position. To imply being a top seed makes a banner a foregone conclusion is to discount just how hard those teams have to work over those 6+ matches to seal the deal. |
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