![]() |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
Of course, normal methodology at Fall Classic is that the QFs are single-elimination, so it's 3/6 and 4/5, then 1 and 2 face the winners in typical fashion. |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
I'm sorry that you have to get so angry about a comment based on the information available on Blue Alliance. There is no indication in the Sunday information that the field was somehow of limited size. (And Saturday's info shows only the elimination alliances.) A more measured comment explaining the situation rather than lashing out is much more appropriate on a web forum. Please consider your language and tone when you enter a discussion here. It sounds like your anger is better aimed at the event organizers, but rationally and calmly discussing the options with them about how to make it a better event.
Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
(And note that I am not anti-sport. I won league individual and team championships and set a school record at a NCAA Division 1 school as well as competing in several national championships.) That said, that means that we need to consider during the off season how might we increases the involvement and enthusiasm of potential new participants. Many students and even teams are new to FIRST in the fall before the Kickoff. Why not change the rules or at least the informal agreements about alliance selections as one way? I like the rule of not being able to draft your 2nd robot unless none other are available. As for not drafting an alliance captain, there are two solutions. The first is have a coaches meeting beforehand and ask if the coaches agree that the competition is informal enough that they might agree to this. This year, I'm pretty sure that they would have said no at Chezy Champs and yest at Capital City where we competed. I have no problem with these different outcomes. A second approach is to have a rule that if a team was in the Top 8 going into the last match and they lose, then they can't be drafted in the first round, or alternatively, by the top 4 alliances. That will eliminate any real benefits from trying to game the rankings. I think we need to keep in mind the spirit of what we're trying to achieve in FRC. We're not trying to build the De Le Salle football machine. We're trying to educate the best engineers, scientists and other professionals and technical workers that we can. |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
Also, I did note (in the "spoiler") that I was not being entirely serious in the second paragraph. Some of it was intended as a "where does this sort of questioning stop", by showing the logical continuation of your stated reason for offseasons. For the record, the goal of the Fall Classic differs somewhat from your reasoning; for convenience: Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
As you stated in a post of your own, seeing a teams A robot, and B robot face off in elims is great to see, we all agree on that. The concern that he is expressing is not that these teams have 3 robots in elims, the concern is that these robots are all ending up on the same alliance instead of pairing up with other teams and cooperating with teams that aren't their own. I think this is a perfectly valid concern, it's somewhat of an unspoken rule that picking your own team isn't the most GP thing to do. Offseason competitions are not about winning, they are about giving teams experience, and the best way for new teams to gain experience is to play with veteran teams, not against them. Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
As for the complaints about the event, I wasn't the one complaining about the event--it appeared that you were. I was thinking about the broader issue of selecting off season alliances, and this situation just highlighted this bigger issue. It made me think much more about how we need to focus on that during our alliance selection at off season events. 254 told us that they chose 1114 at IRC because they has already allied with 469 and they hadn't been with 1114 before. I thought that was a tremendous attitude. We are all both competitors and alliance mates because of the FRC format. We should try to join with as many teams as possible in various situations. It sure makes it much more fun! http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/im...es/biggrin.gif |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
The equivalence is this: It's something that many people disagree with, that is a valid play under event rules. Therefore, if someone is complaining, they really have no solid footing other than "I think it's not fair". OK, you don't like it, we get it. But we happen to have our own opinion. In this case, event rules happen to differ from FRC rules. You don't like it, but the event organizers chose to allow it, so it's perfectly valid, regardless of whether you like it or not. Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
Quote:
Incidentally, I think I can answer the second bold portion for two teams. One declined due to a sidecar issue (fried, I think they said); the other due to unknown electrical gremlins that they didn't want to burden their alliance with, or something to that effect. I think any disappointment there would be directed within the teams, as in disappointment at their own issues, which would be an issue at a regional as well, not at being left out of eliminations due to twin-picking. |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
I don't necessarily agree that it's not beneficial to ally with your own team's B robot. It can be quite beneficial, in terms of winning the event (and all the effects of winning an offseason event), assuming that that actually happens, due to having not one but two of the X robots on the alliance being controlled by good friends. I see it as little different than two collaborating teams with the same robot running on the same alliance. You could (at 4-team-alliance events) sit one of the two and end up with one perfectly good robot and one spare robot that can equal it if necessary. There are some other decent reasons, most likely, and I'm sure there are some negatives too, but each team at the offseason that has a twin robot has to make that decision. (In this case, including the team that ran two robots as well as supplying most of the volunteers!) As far as the GP/non-GP: Usually, if someone comes out and says "That's un-GP", they're complaining about a legal strategy that they just happen not to like, or something similar, and often have adjusted it to fit their own definition. 9/10 times, there is no real way to call "un-GP" on a situation without showing up as being the opposite of GP yourself. But very rarely, there is that one time. This might be that time, it might not be. |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
I think the whole of this thread comes down to this, What is the spirit in which the event was organized? Was it meant to be an all out competition, who is the best, who could put together the best 1, or two, robot(s) and play the best game, or was it to encourage involvement in FIRST. If its the former then by all means the rules should be pick whoever you want and may the best alliance when. But if it is the latter, which I suspect is the case for most off season events, then there should be some limit to who you can and cannot pick for eliminations. And that decision belongs to those that organize the event on how best to encourage involvement of other teams. If you don't like the rules, then you don't have to go, find some other event to go to. Rather than going to an event then complaining about it here on CD or anywhere else.
|
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
As a competitive athlete, I knew when certain competitions were very important, and other ones where I could work on different strategies or work with my teammates or even friends to improve their competitive outcomes. Not every "competition" is of the same importance or consequences. Rarely are off season events of significant importance, and never of the same consequence as a Regional or District. Because backing from the competitive fires requires mutual agreement among all of the teams--it can't be instituted by a team on their own for very obvious reasons--the event organizers need to dictate the tone of the competition. At the Fall Classic, two alliances on Sunday had dual team robots. Why couldn't they have swapped in some manner? Teams are missing the entire point of the FRC alliance structure if they think that all of the benefits need to accrue within a single team playing among "good friends." Why can't you have "good friends" on other teams? We most certainly would rather play with other teams than with ourselves. I honestly don't see any pluses of playing together within our own team vs learning even more about alliance management with other teams (and having 2 drive teams learning similar lessons). You do NOT learn alliance management if you have 2 robots from the same team. (And why not double the chance that you'll be on an winning alliance by splitting your team?) Alliance management has been critical to our recent success--maybe the single most important one. And your right, most of the commentary has been contrary to how it played out. That's the point of this post. Regardless of the shortage of teams, it could have been managed better. And more more importantly, we can hope that other off season events think more explicitly about this issue. |
Re: A comment about alliance selection in off season events
Quote:
Every year teams compete at events (official and offseason) for various reasons and there isn't one blanket reason that will work for every team. Even at regionals/districts you will meet teams who aren't there to win on the field. Not every offseason event is viewed the same way by every team. Even at a pretty laid back event there will be teams who are there with the intent to do their best and are aiming to win and there are those who are just training new students or giving new ones a chance. If a team wants to do so by picking a certain robot that is their decision even if is is their own. If you really have an issue go talk to the event organizers instead of debating here on CD where it is pointless and it isn't hard to tell what teams you are referring to. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 15:36. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi