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Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
I just did a little research on the blue alliance, and I saw that your team lost to teams 40 and 20 in the Boston Regional finals this year. Both of these teams won another regional before Boston. Is this the reason why you don't think teams should be allowed to compete in more than one regional? You feel robbed of something that would of been yours had 20 and 40 not been there? Are you proposing that teams 20 and 40 are ungracious because they beat you? You honestly think it would be more inspiring to limit the talent at your competition in order for you to win, rather than play 3 hard fought matches and lose in the finals, knowing you gave some great teams a run for their money? Thats not very competitive at all. I'm just trying to imagine how you would be proud of your "win" in that case. It would be like saying "Yeah, we really didn't have the better robot, but lucky for us, the better robots aren't allowed to compete at our regional, so we won!" Just getting to the finals is a feat that my former team was only able to accomplish once in its 11 year history, you should be proud of what your team was able to accomplished this year, and not take away from what other teams accomplished either.
Mike C. |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
It saddens me to see that people want to dumb down the competitions.
For crying out loud, you are talking about a COMPETITIVE sporting event. This is not pinewood derby. This is not a science fair. This is a sport, and in sports there are winners and losers. Before I joined 254 I was on a team that did not enjoy much success on the field. While I was on 100 we had a good robot, a couple mediocre-average robots, and one god-awful robot. We made the eliminations only 3 times in my 4 years. Statistically speaking our best season was my senior year, when we were Silicon Valley Finalists, despite having one of the worst robots I have ever laid eyes on. Even when I was on 100 I wanted to play with or against the big boys. How do you make yourself better if you aren't practicing and competing with/against the best of the best? I'd have been angry if we weren't able to play with and against those teams because they had already won an event. What's the fun in knowing that the field of teams is being handicapped? It's easy for me to say this now, as my team has won two regionals per year all three years I have been a mentor, but even now I am continually inspired by teams like 1114 who construct machines which totally dominate. Sometimes it is shocking how simple some of the top machines are. For example, 90% of FIRST teams could build robots similar to 330's. They really are very simple, yet they perform better than 90% of the robots out there. This tells me that all teams have something they can learn from the elite teams, and apply to their own robots without much difficulty. |
Re: GP? I think not.
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I don't see what you are asking the successful team to do. Once a team wins a regional, then the only way they can avoid winning another is to either withdraw from subsequent regionals, or throw matches in their next regional so as to deliberately lose. The latter would be incredibly uninspiring, ungracious and unprofessional, especially to the alliance partners in those matches who would also be losing the games. Please re-read Beth's message #8 - she said it much better than I could, and rep is coming her way. Edit: It appears others had the same thoughts as I. And I see in a later post that you advocate teams only being allowed to attend one regional. Following this logic, Tiger Woods should be allowed to enter one single golf event all season long, and only if he wins that event, would he be allowed to go to the Masters (or whatever other tournament is decided as the championship for golf, I don't follow it that closely) to play against other champions from the rest of the golf tournaments that year. That would be seriously uninspiring for golf fans. The same thing would happen if FRC teams were limited to one event - although if the program continues to grow, that might become real eventually, but I digress. I feel a bit less inspired this year because GLR and GTR were on the same weekend, and I didn't get to see 1114 in person. I suspect my inspiration will be restored in Atlanta. Have you ever talked to any of these super teams? Have you ever asked them for help? 1025 is around today only because of the tremendous help we got from a super team, the ThunderChickens, for an entire year. Team 903 was able to compete in Detroit only because of the help they got from multiple teams (many of them super teams) to rebuild their robot to comply with 2008 rules, and then they went on to be an alliance captain at West Michigan. The help the super teams give is inspiriing on its own, beside the inspiration they provide on the field. You might also be interested in this post: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...559#post729559 |
Re: GP? I think not.
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And let's look at the big picture. FIRST doesn't exist for it's own sake at all. Students carry skills and life experiences into school/job interviews, not trophies. We exist to try and provide a better future with an understanding of how technology, innovation, and invention can be utilized for creating more win-win scenarios in the world today. How on earth are we going to prepare the next generation to solve the world's most difficult problems in a socially conscious way by artificially setting the bar lower? Woodie Flowers himself, perhaps the only person on the planet who has the kind of perspective required to really make these kind of "gp judgements" (although you'll never catch him doing it) says flat out that what we do is "not sticky sweet," instead he admits it's "...really, REALLY hard." |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
as being part of what could be called a "power team" i feel like when we go to a regional, i can feel that teams look up to us. when someone comes up to us and says "Gosh you have a great robot!" that excites us and keeps us going, and it makes us want to build a better robot year after year.
our team has not won multiple regionals in a season since 2002. we won peachtree this year and then went to palmetto. team 342 picked us to be on thier alliance. we already knew that we got to go to atlanta, but they picked us because THEY wanted to go to atlanta. we did not only play for ourselves and make our team look better, we played so that we could try and help out our alliance partners get the same winning feeling as we had at peachtree. so what do we tell the teams that want us to help them win? "No thanks, we already won a regional"? i dont think that that is graciously professional to not help another team because you have already won. |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
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edit: (outside, not objective, I am taking a stance on the situation) |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
We competed in AZ where team 39 dominated. We knew we would meet them again in Las Vegas. We were on the opposite side of the field in a qualifying match. Although our robot can score "pretty well", we knew we would lose in a shoot out with 39, so we played defense and won the match.
In the final match we were opposite 39 and undefeated 987 and 1013. We could not shut down two high scorers. Even our scouting program's match simulator predicted a defeat for us. We would have been disappointed if we didn't have a match up with some of the best robots of this year. Winning a regional where the best were not allowed to compete would be a lesser victory. Our varsity team does not want a victory in a competition where the best were excluded. We want to compete with the best, because if we ever win a regional, we want want to know that our alliance beat the best alliance. We went to three regionals this year, but at the Los Angeles regional, we only took our girls. Multiple regionals mean more opportunities for more members to drive, work the pits, etc. Same robot, different team. More experience for more people. FIRST will never be a equal-for-all competition. That's the fun of it. Someday we may beat the "best". Allan |
Re: GP? I think not.
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and THANK YOU to all those who give me bad rep for a having a different opinion than yours, very, very nice. love it. |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
Is that fair for a team to win multiple times and let other teams stand in second place. I believe if you win one regional you should not be allowed to win a second one. That way everyone can compete fairly. If they want to compete again go to the finals or world championship.
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Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
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I suggest listening to this. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...31505846055184 |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
Here's my take on the subject I do not think that teams should be able to compete in two or more different regionals. From what I saw some teams, who are already are going to nationals, still compete and then win (again). I believe that there are several possible advantages to the teams that do this:
1. More practice time with the robot 2. More time to implement new ideas/code 3. More chances to win/move on to nationals I think we should limit teams to only one regional, or if a team wins at a regional and is moving on to nationals they should not be allowed to compete in another regional. Also I believe that even if you announce that any team can attend any number of regionals that will give the more experienced/older teams a better advantage because they have time to more fully develop a strong budget to accommodate travel expenses. |
Re: GP? I think not.
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EDIT: please stop giving DanTod a bad rep just for a differing of opinion... thats not cool. even if they are just dots. |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
I'm missing something, y'all help me out.
a. why does FIRST have to be fair? b. if it has to be fair, where do we start? - do we make sure every team has a trailer to haul their robot? - do we make sure every team has a well equipped shop? - do we make sure every team has funding for travel or has equal access to funding and sponsors? How do we do that? - do we make sure that the teams are the same size? - do we make sure the teams all do the same outreach? I genuinely want to know why and how but my opinion in this without knowing those answers is that when we go for the fair thing, we start setting limits. Those limits start setting boundaries. Those boundaries start denying access. Lack of access starts impacting development, growth, and innovation. Like I said, I'm missing something. |
Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
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Re: Winning Multiple Regionals
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And no FIRST does not absolutely have to be fair, but I think if it is as much as possible without putting harmful limits, it can only add to the fun of the competition. |
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