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-   -   [YMTC]: Robot Ability (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=57161)

George1902 25-04-2007 15:12

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
As a coach, it's my job to see what tools our alliance has to play with and what obstacles the opponents will be throwing at us. I'd have to honestly assess how well I think my team could cap with little to no drive practice on this newly upgraded arm. This is how I would probably approach my partners:

"You guys are capping juggernauts. That's what we need you to do. We'll play our match on the other side of the field and try to draw attention away from you guys. While we're there, you know we can play some hard defense, but my pit crew just told me we finally got our capper functional. If we get the chance to make a few defensive caps and maybe a spoiler cap towards the end, we'll try it. Basically, you two throw up lots of tubes, and we'll make their two minutes very difficult."

This seems like a reasonable proposal. Smart cappers will love to be able to play on their own side all match.

Under no circumstances would I abandon the plan just to fulfill our own personal goals. If our goals are that important, it's my responsibility to work them into the game strategy somehow.

Shoob189 25-04-2007 15:27

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Personally, I think you should go with your alliance if they can provide solid reasoning for you to play defence (which they seem to have done) and if they aren't dictating it to you and not listening to your opinion. Being a main strategy person on my team, one of the most frustrating things I've run up against is when we come up with a strategy with one of our alliance mates and the other alliance mate refuses to cooperate without providing good reason (ex: they don't cooperate just because they don't like it). I believe in making sacrifices for the good of the team. If I can provide something my alliancemates want, I'll do it even if it is less favorable to me (ex: playing defence with a scoring bot). It is a hard decision to make (especially if you just got it working). Who knows, mid-match the oppertunity may come where you need to put one up or change strategies.

Bharat Nain 25-04-2007 15:34

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
You go with the discussed strategy. If you settled on playing defense, then play defense. This is very important because if you follow the strategy, the teams you are partnered up with might be in the top 8 and may feel like picking you even if it is second round. However, if you broke the strategy, you are off their list. At least our list. If during the course of the match there is no defense to be played, then of course you should take a ringer/spoiler and cap it.

If the team really wants to play offense(in this scenario), they should let their alliance partners know that is what they are going to do. This way, at least they can compensate/change/play along with that strategy. I think it's all simple enough.

Andy Baker 25-04-2007 15:47

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by George1902 (Post 622142)
Under no circumstances would I abandon the plan just to fulfill our own personal goals. If our goals are that important, it's my responsibility to work them into the game strategy somehow.

George knows what he is talking about... this is exactly right.

I am always amazed by the abrubtness of people in a pre-match strategy session. It's not a student or adult thing, either... I've seen an equal number of forceful students and adults.

If I am involved in a strategy session, the first thing I ALWAYS say to the other alliance partners is this:

"what do you want to do in this match"

Our drive team has an idea of what we want them to do, but it's more important to know what they want to do initially. From there, we try to meld what they want to do into what we want them to do, and meet for a comprimise.

In this case, if I were the team that Mike's team was approaching, I would recommend that they start with scoring 1 or 2*. If they do well, then they could keep scoring. As the coach, I would monitor their progress and still coach our drivers. We could switch our plan and go play defense, if needed.

* Just how much freedom this team would have would greatly depend on just how much the teams in the alliance needs this win. Unless we would be in the top 16-20, this match may not mean much to us. The other teams in the alliance may agree. However, if one of these teams are in the top 10, there is no way they can afford a loss. So, this team would be hard pressed for any risky moves. If that was the case and we were in the top 10, I would suggest that this team score 1 only and then go play defense for a while... then get back to scoring 1 at the end if the situation allowed.

AB

Chris Fultz 25-04-2007 16:01

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
it needs to be an "alliance strategy", not one teams strategy pushed onto the others.

I would have the discussions and see what works best for the group. Like AB said, how critical is the win for all three teams, and how much risk is the alliance willing to take. Ideally, the team can show off their scoring capability for the first 30 seconds then switch to another mode of play to assure a win.

Once the strategy is agree, then everyone needs to play what was agreed. the worst possible solution is saying YES and then doing your own thing.

I am usually part of these discussions for 234, and work hard to avoid pushing any particular plan, but instead makeing sure all teams input is heard and evaluated. I try to summarize and be sure we all agree and understand, then review it again just before the match.

I have seen 'bully' leads that were students and mentors - we just have to manage around it.

Grant Cox 25-04-2007 16:37

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Regards to the original thread:

Offensive all the way. Not only is this game better when played with 3 offensive robots *cough*, showing that they have the ability will influence other teams' scouting reports for sure. Everyone knows that they can play great defense already, why not throw mediocre ringing in there too? Who knows, the elimination alliance they're on might have picked them for their defense with the option to score if needed. In this game, being able to do both makes you very appealing.



Regards to where the thread seems to have gone:

Adults vs. Students: It doesn't matter if you've got Andy Baker with his whiteboard or little Susie from across the block, all that matters is how well that person knows the game. If little Susie spends all day reviewing the rulebook and watching match videos, she may be better than an adult in a similar position. One of the best pre-match strategy sessions for us on Friday (in my opinion) was with 1126 and their awesome student coach. He knew more about strategy than a lot of the adult coaches had during the day, and by the time the match came we had a flawless plan. The match itself was lost due to unforeseeable circumstances, but that's not the point.

Democracy vs dictatorship: For those of you saying "well the veteran team ordered us to do things we didn't want," you need to stand up for yourself and say "I believe we can do this better, it would probably be more beneficial for the match if you let us do this" because if the veteran strategist knows anything about what they're doing, they'll use every robot on the team to their full ability. If they came in with the idea that team X is going to score middle on the far side, and team X is actually much more comfortable (and better) playing defense, that might be what wins the match (being good at one thing, not being mediocre at another). I find it hard to believe that a FIRST coach would refuse to let a robot do what they're good at.

Whatever you do, don't just switch strategies on your own without the whole alliance adjusting the idea as a whole. If something happens and you feel the need to play defense or ring somewhere different or whatever, tell the other coaches. [shameless plug] Whenever I hear Paul say "agh this isn't working, try going to the other side" it's immediately followed by "hey guys we're going to the far side, don't bother defending the front anymore" or "try and move the row back there and we'll connect" or something like that. I've also heard the opposite, "hey our arm just broke, we've gotta switch to defense" "okay we'll fill in your row." it can be fixed, if your teammates know what you're doing. Too many times have I gone back to review the video of a lost match, only to see that team Y didn't even attempt to do what was discussed in the pre-match meeting. What's the point in discussing it if you're just going to ignore it?



*breathe*

jagman2882 25-04-2007 17:42

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by GeeForce (Post 622179)

Adults vs. Students: One of the best pre-match strategy sessions for us on Friday (in my opinion) was with 1126 and their awesome student coach. He knew more about strategy than a lot of the adult coaches had during the day, and by the time the match came we had a flawless plan.

thats my little brother!!! he must have learned from me:D just kidding thats all him!!! Dylan Gramlich is his name. I do agree tho, he goes into those strategy sessions knowing what needs to be said

Pavan Dave 25-04-2007 18:29

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by dlavery (Post 622117)
and since, at least during my observations of the process, it is usually an adult coach from a team that tells their allaince partners what to do (rather than discuss it), this is the exact reason that we always allow only students on our drive team.

-dave

I have a question about veteran teams telling rookies what to do. If everybody says "stick with what works" than if the veteran team has experience, I believe they would be saying "what works" since most veterans have some sort of scouting system. Why would this not be a "stick with what works"? I understand if the tone of the speaker was a bit demanding or if they were rude, but why change the game plan and sabotage a good plan?


Pavan.

Liz Smith 25-04-2007 19:53

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pavan (Post 622207)
I have a question about veteran teams telling rookies what to do. If everybody says "stick with what works" than if the veteran team has experience, I believe they would be saying "what works" since most veterans have some sort of scouting system. Why would this not be a "stick with what works"? I understand if the tone of the speaker was a bit demanding or if they were rude, but why change the game plan and sabotage a good plan?


Pavan.

I think that you are the only ones who know what your robot is capable of doing. For example, if you know that your ramp is broken, you're not going to volunteer to lift both robots during a match, no matter how consitent your robot has been in previous matches. I think that pre-match strategy discussions should not be dominated by one team, no matter how long that team has been around, or how much scouting they have done.

I remember once in 2005 (Think tetras) before one of the matches, one of the mentors from one of the teams on our alliance was pressuring us to agree to cap specific goals. The problem was, we were better at placing the tetras underneath the goals (a strategy that had made us a finalist and a regional winner). Though our robot may have been able to complete that task, we had only capped the goals a couple times and were not confident that we could do what they wanted us to. If they were the only team with input into the strategy of that match and if we didn't speak up, we probably would have wasted a lot of the time in that match. I'm all for asking "what do you want to do in this match" rather than telling "this is the best way for us to do things".

For this situation? I think that a good coach is the key. You can choose a strategy where you try to score for the first X amount of seconds, and revert back to defense if certain things happen. If you can't score within X seconds, you'll go back to defense. If an opposing team is scoring ringers left and right, then go back on defense. If you spend the whole two minutes trying to score one ringer, while the other alliance has just scored 256 points, there is a problem. As long as the coach is keeping a good eye on the clock, and a good eye on what's going on around on the field, and is communicating with the other teams on the alliance, the match should be successful.

JesseK 27-04-2007 09:59

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
As a mentor who was also the drive coach and one of the strategists, I believe that it is more beneficial for your team to do offense in a situation such as the OP's. It's more beneficial simply because it shows the fruits of the labor the mechanical/programming team put into a manipulator. It shows them what it actually took to get the durn thing working! Now maybe next time they can plan ahead & design/test instead one fire and then the next.

Strategically, it could help your alliance out as well. If you explain to them the other capabilities of your robot, and that you'll attempt to "score one on the way by" and then cap the back (effective defense b/c you get in the opposition's way too), you have an argument that is tough to fight. It was also my experience that scouts have your greatest strength figured out before your final match.

Typically the students on my drive team would do the scouting for our next alliance, simply so they could get the full experience of having to work with other engineering-minded people. The one thing to teach is that regardless of how great your mind is or how knowledgable you are, you still HAVE to be able to communicate well. I would simply step in and suggest ideas for strategies (like how to split the opposition's defense in our 256-scoring match in Atlanta), but for the most part we would all stay open to others' ideas. Hopefully others can learn to do the same since I don't see alliance-style matches going away any time soon.

Graham Donaldson 27-04-2007 10:26

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
We had a couple of situations similar to this this year: we were a single bot @12" ramp, excellent defense, and modest scoring capability. Our goal at the beginning of the year was not necessarily to be a team that picked, but a team that is picked. In this year's game in particular, a lot of the high-scoring teams seeded high. Chances are, they'll pick an offensive bot and a defensive bot w/ a ramp. If you can play good defense and help win matches consistently, you'll get picked. Stick with the plan.

kawelch 27-04-2007 11:55

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
To quote Mel the cook on Alice... "The best D-fense is a good O-fense." I agree that if you can place ringers while playing Defense...DO IT. Run around with a spoiler waiting for the best opportunity. Just the threat of a spoiler can mess witht the other teams plans....

Jimmy Cao 18-09-2007 22:58

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
I would try my best to talk to the other alliances. If they're both strong scoring robots, then they can prob still win the match with you playing decent offense. Most teams would understand that you want to try to make your robot stand out, and they will prob let you play offense if u try to talk to them and reason about it.

dilbert 07-04-2008 21:03

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
During the strategy talks, did Redateam ever ask the other scorers if they could try and hurdle at the beginning of the match? What I would have done was ask the other alliance partners if we could try to hurdle at the beginning of the match. If we are ahead, we would continue hurdling, but if we fell behind, we would start our defense.

Vikesrock 07-04-2008 21:08

Re: [YMTC]: Robot Ability
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by dilbert (Post 732393)
During the strategy talks, did Redateam ever ask the other scorers if they could try and hurdle at the beginning of the match? What I would have done was ask the other alliance partners if we could try to hurdle at the beginning of the match. If we are ahead, we would continue hurdling, but if we fell behind, we would start our defense.

This may have led to some strange looks in an '07 strategy meeting :ahh:


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