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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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I took a class this summer on Sabermetrics and the baseball world is just nuts over different models over different data sets. They are tracking temps, wind speeds, humidity, etc on top of all the other data that they gather. I'd consider OPR to be a poor cousin to Sabermetrics WAR. |
Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
Personally I don't think it is, this weekend we beat an alliance that had the 2 highest OPR's at the competition with robots that had the 12th and 15th OPR's.
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Sure lots of people do the "We were ranked high but didn't get picked" card, which yes it's true. However people don't use rankings to the same degree as OPR numbers for global comparison. People (several examples even today within the last few hours) on chief compare teams based on OPR values that didn't attend the same event. People never say "I was rank 5 at xxx regional you were rank 6 at yyyy regional, I must be better" However that happens with OPR all the time. Secondly it's all good and fine to complain about things, but when you don't present a better solution to the problem what is the point? The problem with OPR is some people consider it as the law, and don't understand at all where it comes from or how it is calculated or what it's limitations are. The solution is to use it as a guidline, and watch the actual matches before you go around making conclusions. So your problem is the ranking system isn't good enough to your satisfaction, and your solution is...? That's all just things to think about the two differences between rankings and OPR and why people are more vocal about OPR. There isn't a solution to the rankings problem (aside from playing an infinite number of matches) that will properly sort the teams based on ability. There may be a better solution, but nothing will be perfect. |
Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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As far as how it works, the simplest explanation is that OPR is the assumption that every robot always contributes the same amount of points. This assumption is obviously false, but it's often close enough that it can still provide useful data. Learning how this calculation is done is honestly not that hard, and it can provide some useful insight into the limitations and capabilities of OPR. |
Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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418 at Arkansas 2014 973 at Central Valley 2014 1796 at New York City 2014 1287 at North Carolina 2014 3986 at Montreal 2014 This is really beside the point though, I never claimed this to be a common occurrence. I made up an example to prove a point. I knew this was not a common occurence, but was just providing a statement which indicated lack of knowledge of the drawbacks of the ranking system. Quote:
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Look, I don't want to be the defender of OPR. OPR has some very clear limitations that many people do not realize. OPR is just a tool, it doesn't fit every situation, but it certainly has uses. If some people don't want OPR in their metaphorical toolbox, that is fine, there are many other tools. However, if I see anyone that has rank in their toolbox and not OPR, I will try to convince them to use OPR. Hopefully someday every match at every event will be archived and teams will publicly share their scouting databases, and OPR will become obsolete. Until then, I will always use OPR to compare performance at events. *2015 was a bit of an exception. Although it does fall under the "screwy ranking algorithms" umbrella, the average score system did a much better job than WLT for sorting teams, but then we had to have coopertition also, which just ruined it. **For anything other than calculating points in a district system. |
Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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However, over an infinitely large sample I'd love to see what OPR could do in a game like 2014. Jared made reference to "secondary effects" in his post, referring to freeing up resources on your alliance that could be spent elsewhere. That's the type of thing, in theory, OPR could be better at tracking than manual data entry. It's easy to manually track how teams complete objectives and directly impact the scoresheet, it's much tougher to determine how they impact the match in less obvious ways. The most obvious example is defense, which is very hard to quantify accurately (and "DPR" has rarely done a good job at it). In a game like 2014, where so much of the match is spent playing "away from the ball" (playing defense, positioning for the next cycle, blocking for teammates, etc), it can be really hard to determine how effective some teams are at impacting the score sheet. This is even true in professional sports, where broadcasters and analysts frequently talk about "intangibles" and how players impact the game in ways other than scoring (think good defensemen in hockey or offensive linemen in football, for instance). Sports have also turned to more advanced metrics to try and solve this, ranging from the sabremetrics movements in baseball and hockey to the motion tracking in basketball and soccer. That's the type of area where OPR/DPR/CCWM could potentially have significant value. However, a 12 match sample size (with random alliance partners/opponents) is nowhere near enough data to iron out the noise. |
Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
The spread on this year's OPRs appear to be quite compressed across the events so far (vs. last year which had the biggest spread ever). As a result, upsets are much more likely--the OPRs have error terms that are probably bigger than the apparent differences.
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
A factor in this is that the game is played and scored differently in the elimination rounds. OPR is a measurement that may be considered when choosing alliance partners though for example, shooting is much more important in elimination rounds than it has been in qualifications to date. I would hope that the alliance captain has a plan to build the best alliance and make selections based on the way they believe and elimination round should be played knowing the game is scored and played differently.
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Re: Is OPR an accurate measurement system?
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