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Movement Towards Video Review
After recent events at the World Championship, I believe the push for video reviews in FIRST. Many people don't see the need for them and I myself was originally skeptical about them. My view changed at the Championship this week when we were pinned for an extended period of time and the ref didn't call it.
https://youtu.be/y56cRWjvW-c?t=54s Now on a separate note on what happened after the pin, being the driver I apologize to 48 about the flip. 100% didn't mean to flip and was just trying to get separation by pushing your robot away before I broke hard back to the secret passage. I hope no damage was done and that there are no hard feelings. The flip was unintentional but it happened so I will apologize for it. Video review is something that I'd like to see happen in the near future to eliminate moments like these. Penalties as we saw this year have huge impacts on the outcomes of events. Everyone knows that the refs are humans and volunteers and make mistakes but it's unfortunate those mistakes can negate a team's hours and hard work put into the season. Video reviews would help make FIRST competitions run smoother and more fairly. The point of this thread is not to complain about bad refs, but a thread to discuss ways to set video reviews into action. What are the pros and cons everyone sees in making a movement like this? What are some solutions? Is this something that ChampsLive can help with? -Sean |
Re: Movement Towards Video Review
You are presenting this as though it is indisputable that you were pinned. However, that's not so indisputable.
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Further, your opponent retreats and you chase the robot, hence ending the pin. True, it wasn't for a 6 foot distance, but the opponent backed away, and you pursued. At that point you were not against an object and hence not pinned. You may not agree with the referee's decision, but that referee is looking right at the interaction and determined there was no pin. Perhaps what I said above is what was going through that referee's mind. And, seeing that your dispute involves a referee's judgement, what would be your criteria for the resolution? If the ref isn't counting, then the team doesn't think they are pinning, and they don't move. Would it be equally unfair to that opponent team who believed they were within the rules to be suddenly told they have a penalty, or worse a card, when they had no opportunity to correct their behavior? |
Re: Movement Towards Video Review
As a driver coach, that match is insanely frustrating to watch. 48 was definitely taking advantage of the situation. It was either a 7-second pin or a 19-second pin. 7 seconds if the ref thought you could go through the secret passage to get out, or 19 seconds if the ref considered the secret passage as part of the pin. Or perhaps the ref thought you could drive over the invisible shield on the batter.
It really just looks like that ref wasn't cognisant in that match. 120 matches in, and towards the end of a nearly 12-hour day, that ref was most definitely fatigued. This year the game didn't get easier to ref just because the season progressed further. I don't know that live reviewers would have changed anything in that match, because they may have been just as tired by that point. |
Re: Movement Towards Video Review
I am not sure video replay would helped in this situation. I agree that you were pinned since you cannot go into the secret passage without high potential for a penalty. But nothing could really be done about that after the match. You would have still received a red card for flipping using what seems to be the criteria for that this year. You would no longer have been considered "pinned" the point you flipped him.
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Re: Movement Towards Video Review
I highly suggest 16 sign up for Ryan Dognaux's offseason event in St. Louis. They will be implementing video review, from what I've heard. It should be a nice testing platform for the future.
Feel free to contact him to register! http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/member.php?u=1812 |
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Come on back to St. Louis in October - Where we're cool and like to try stuff to make FIRST better.™ 16 knows all about the GRC already though, they were at our inaugural event and they're awesome! |
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Even though the secret passage was an option, it was very likely that 48 would have continued the pin onto Bomb Squad, also drawing a tech foul onto the red alliance. The argument that the Bomb Squad's driver motions is that a video review would reduce the chance of any uncertainty and make these calls indisputable. |
Re: Movement Towards Video Review
I wouldn't focus on our match in particular. Like I said this is more for finding solutions to problems instead of looking at things that are already over. I posted our video as more of an example than something to critique. I understand that the red card would mean that the pin is useless to us but the points that could come from the pin would be huge to the other teams on the alliance that the red card didn't affect. But like I said this is not about this one match, but missed or bad calls in general that some sort of review system can fix and I'd like to see everyone's ideas about how this can be done like the off season trials that were mentioned.
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Re: Movement Towards Video Review
In what sport do they allow video review for a missed call? Let alone a missed penalty call.
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That being said, I don't agree with reviews for pins. The procedure for calling a pin specifically includes a 5-second warning of such. Without a referee signaling this, a driver has no way to know whether or not a referee thinks they're pinning someone. |
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In college football, it's things related to possession, side lines, goal line, and end line (including goal posts). That's it. You can't review holding, pass interference, the cheap shot on the line, or Ndamukong Suh stepping on your face. Looking to FRC... Well, on the definitely "can" be reviewed list would be scores that were missed. Things like a boulder being stuck in the chute, a defense cross being missed, bad frisbee count (2013), etc. On the definitely "can't" be reviewed list are most fouls. Particularly any foul where you get a warning before the penalty, like pinning. To retroactively invoke fouls is unfair to the team that receives the penalty, as others have posted here. To the OP's second post: You don't want us to focus on your particular situation yet you use it as your sole example for establishing video review. Video review wouldn't have helped your situation and would not have "eliminated moments like these". I therefore fail to see a compelling argument to implement video review. QED. |
Re: Movement Towards Video Review
Personally, I think implementing video review would cause more problems than it would solve. If a team is pinning, but the refs aren't calling it, then the drive team is under the impression that what they are doing is perfectly legal and has no reason to stop. Implementing video review and fouling that team after the match is unfair in my opinion. I understand that refs calls are not always 100% fair, but I don't think implementing video review is the way to solve that problem.
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