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Re: # of Divisions at Championships
Does Dean refer to Championship as the Super Bowl of Smarts? Or FRC in general?
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Re: # of Divisions at Championships
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1) Former Michigander here - wait, there's more than 1 playoff game? |
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"The Super Bowl of Smarts" has morphed into a bit of a colloquialism. I am sure Dean has referred to the Championship Event being "like a Super Bowl" in the past, and you can find articles about the Championship event being referred to as "The Super Bowl of Smarts." I have always agreed with using the tagline "The Varsity Sport for the Mind" and we will continue to use a less sanitized and fat-free vanilla version of that tag when we pitch our program. |
Re: # of Divisions at Championships
I would love for FIRST to keep 8 divisions in the dome but I doubt that will happen. I truly think they want to bring the other two programs back into the main building again and make them feel like they are as appreciated as FRC is.
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I'm also going to reiterate a point I made the last time this came up, that some people, who think this is a robot building contest, are in serious trouble--and that's actually from Dean or Woodie at Kickoff some years back. This is a robot building contest, yes--but it's also a bunch of life lessons, a passel of inspiration, and hopefully some recognition. It's also a pretty severe time sink... Treating it as just a robot building contest is not accurate. What I'd be hoping for would be 8 divisions, 50 teams each, NO MORE THAN 12 matches per team. (Wait, what?) Before you all start going crazy, I'd also say that no fewer than 10 matches would be acceptable. And the reason for that is to allow either more free time or less overall time. This would particularly benefit smaller teams, in that they could get out more and see more of the event, if the free time route was chosen, or that they might be able to cheat a little bit on travel and come in on Thursday morning with minimal loss of time in the pits. More inspiration, less time sink/burnout... interesting dilemma, I'd say. |
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Actually, FIRST didn't trademark it - College Bowl Company Inc trademarked "The Varsity Sport of the Mind" |
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We're well past the point about complaining that half champs is diluting the quality of the event. What I'm saying is that with an already diluted competition it would be idiotic to run 8 divisions and cause even further dilution. Not to mention the fact that it will put an even bigger strain on your volunteer base that you're already spreading too thin by holding 2 events in the first place. |
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I am pretty thankful that we usually do not have robot building contests because frankly I am very terrible at building robots but do what most would describe as a remotely passable job or at least a somewhat disguised impersonation of a coach for a competitive team. 12 matches per event in the district system is very much pushing many team's limits in terms of in-event upkeep and the time spent at the venue. I think the 12 matches per event is GREAT at the local level. For large scale travel, I think it could be considered a mistake. Quote:
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Re: # of Divisions at Championships
I have a problem with the argument that ties inspiring more teams to the current and very specific Champion competitiveness situation. Claiming this as a necessary sacrifice for broader inspiration actively implies that more-competitive teams who do not qualify are actually less deserving of Champs inspiration than the less-competitive teams that do.
This isn't necessarily an argument for a powerhouse Champs (or a particular division/bracket style). It's directly about the many teams we all know in that operable-but-improvable realm who could benefit massively for years from just one Champs experience. It doesn't take much to lift them, and it doesn't take much to raise current Champs' lost-bumper competitiveness. I'm not claiming that these above-par (or any) teams are more deserving of inspiration than others, but they are certainly not less. At worst, switching should have no net effect; at best we argue that fewer lost wheels at Champs is better for everyone's inspiration quotient. The qualification system is not perfect, and we all know that. It's iterated pretty regularly. And even in a perfect system, it's likely FiM DChamps would outperform many Divisions. But dismissing all desires to raise attendee competitiveness as inherently detrimental to inspiration is a disservice to the many above-par teams who would benefit hugely from a Champs attendance. |
Re: # of Divisions at Championships
Frank just said nothing is official yet, but he's "not a fan of 100 team divisions".
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Re: # of Divisions at Championships
On the FUN Q&A, Frank said he isn't a fan of 100-team divisions, that they are too big, which suggests (these are now my words, not his) that there will be more than four divisions for each super regional.
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To go with a point I was making earlier: smaller divisions, with fewer matches overall, to get into the 10+ matches/team range (for a 50-team field, 84 total matches with a couple of surrogates playing in one or two of 'em will give 10 matches each; to get 12 matches, 100 matches even will work) and more downtime or a more compressed schedule is probably the way to go over bigger divisions and fewer matches. That underlined part is the key tradeoff. More downtime means longer lunch breaks, or more time to see the rest of the competition/festival--read, conferences, other divisions, other teams in the pits, the other three events, supplier showcase, innovation fair, you get the idea. But a more compressed schedule can mean shorter time at the event, which can maybe allow teams (or volunteers?) to redeye in and save a night's hotel. Back when I was a student, 75-80 team divisions were the norm. Seemed about right, but then you get the challenge of sorting out who's playing for the half-trophy and half-banner for winning the half-championship if you've got 400 teams and you're capping divisions at 75-80 teams each. |
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