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Re: Round Robin on Einstein
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If those two problems could be addressed, I'd be interested. Another alternative would be a double-elimination tournament: Round 1 - A beats C - G beats N Round 2 ("loser's bracket") - N beats C Round 3 ("winner's bracket") - G beats A; G advances to finals Round 4 - N beats A Finals - N plays G. N must win twice to take the Championship; G would only be required to win once. No team is eliminated until they lose twice. The only variable is if the finals go to one match or two. Edit: A double-elimination scheme would work for regionals and the division finals as well. |
Re: Round Robin on Einstein
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There are no easy answers in managing the time. |
Re: Round Robin on Einstein
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Kickoff, & The Championship Event. (I know some other events are webcast, but none get as much viewing time as these 2 I'm willing to bet anything on that.) To solve this, maybe FIRST or the general community can organize a suppliers/sponsors/supporters summit to be broadcast to the FIRST community as a quarterly broadcast, or even in e-mailed video format to alleviate some of the speaking during the big show. Youtube & many other media oulets exist, let's use them for their educational purpose & throw some speeches up there for example. I know The Championship Event & Kickoff, & the program is not "all about the robots", this is certainly true, but what draws us in to the FRC program, and the Kickoff, & the Championship Event? Not the promise of hearing a speaker talk (no matter how great they are) but the promise of some exciting matches on the competition playing field, & the possibility of seeing your own team make it to the big show & go all the way. (of course all while being inspired by science & technology) I guess what I'm trying to say here, is let's not criticize any speakers, or the time of their speeches, or their failure to "reach the intended audience", because they deserve to be there as much as we do after all the support they give the program, but let's strive to find a nice balance of speaking & competing while not favoring one over the other, but also knowing that each has it's place in the grand picture & try to find how the two have in the past & refine how they may be able to compliment each other in the future. If a moderator wants to move all the posts in here referring to speech vs. robot time discussion to another thread since we've strayed from the original round-robin format proposal here, feel free to do so. |
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Parading an assortment of adults in front of over stimulated kids while anchoring then to the seats with the promise of even further excitement and then talk at them for long periods of time has not proven to be a popular choice amongst the masses. |
Re: Round Robin on Einstein
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For example, in the event of a tie this year, we could have had a rule that said the tie breaker game would have added an additional trackball into the mix for each team (ala' Beantown Blitz this year). (Just as an example). The change for the tie-breaker would have to be something that would swing the game in favor of an alliance who understood the game completely, because with a tie you've already proven you are (so far) equally matched playing it "regular style". (Ever get bored playing a competitive racing video game in the normal way, so you challenged an equally matched friend to race the course with you backwards for example & see who could handle the change?) In this idea, you would throw in some leverage for the alliance who knows the game inside & out & would see who the best is by seeing which alliance could prove themselves & play it (even more) strategically than the first 2 matches. |
Re: Round Robin on Einstein
After hearing about the passing of Randy Pausch earlier today, I spent most of this morning re-reading "The Last Lecture" (I suspect a lot of other folks have been engaged in similar pursuits - www.thelastlecture.com with the video of his lecture has been swamped all day long). As I was reading through, one chapter in particular made me think of this discussion. The chapter refers to an incident in which his wife manages to back one of their vehicles into the other, impressively denting both. Then follows a discussion about the value of things, and how we perceive what is important. The chapter closes with the following admonition:
"Not everything needs to be fixed." -dave . |
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What do you think was meant by the quote? :) -dave . |
Re: Round Robin on Einstein
I try to get us back on topic & keep us off topic.
As for the round robin tournament, it could work if there wasn't 20 minutes of speeches in between each match. People would lose track of who beat who & who has to play who. And just think of trying to explain this to somebody who is only has a slight understanding of the current elimination structure. But it is much more likely to provide the best 2 alliances in the Finals. I guess you have to look at the problem you are trying to solve. Is the best alliance not winning the Championship? No. So I guess it comes down to getting the recognition for being the second best alliance. For all we know the second best alliance could have been the one the eventual champs faced in the finals of their division. Now for the speeches. For those of you that have a DVR. Next January when the NFL Super bowl is happening, pause the game for twenty minutes every time there is a TV timeout. While your at it you could read a few pages from Oprah's book of the month. Or for those of you that feel too educated to watch football, set down your book and watch football for 20 minutes every other page you turn. |
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