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Qualifying for CMP in the future
I am creating a new thread to discuss ideas for a new qualification system for the FRC Championship, because the thread discussing Bill's post focuses mostly on field / pit layout.
http://frcdirector.blogspot.com/2011/05/yes-im-already-counting-down-to-kickoff.html As Bill says in his blog, eventually there will not be enough spots in the Championship to qualify six teams from every regional and 18 more from Michigan. From the blog: "This summer we’re going to be taking a long hard look at the future of Championship (CMP). At the current rate of growth for FRC, we are going to face a space crunch at CMP in a few years. Consider this. At each regional, six teams earn a space at CMP (the winning alliance, the Engineering Inspiration winner, the Chairman’s Award winner and the Rookie All Star team). This year we had 48 regionals. Add eighteen teams from the Michigan State CMP (When the District pilot began, the State CMP replaced three Regional events.) and you get a total of 306 teams. 352 teams competed this year. Not every team who qualifies to come to CMP can make it, so there are always a few empty slots, but as we continue to add new regionals each year, we are eventually going to run out of room. In the short run, there will be fewer and fewer spaces for non-qualifying teams at CMP. In the long run, we’re going to have to figure out a new system for determining which teams come to CMP." Ideas? |
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I know no one will like this but I say that competing teams should be those who win the Regionals and Rookie All-Star and then everyone else gets in the the MSC qualfying system. Chairman's and EI go but do not compete unless they qualify by points or win a regional, otherwise they would just compete just as Website and Visualization teams do if they weren't invited to CMP in the current format.
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How about a second round of qualification for RCA, EI, and RAS? Sure, you won at your regional, but not every regional winner will be a real competitor at the Championship. I hate to leave people out, but it's not the worst short-term solution I can think of. Michigan is already underrepresented (much, much larger than 2009, but still only 18 qualifiers).
Eventually, this could very well lead to a full two-stage qualification system (Regional Competition -> Regional Championship -> CMP). |
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I think they should increase the amount of teams that make it in Michigan. The number was based on the 3 regionals they had in 2008, but due to growth in Michigan they probably could have 4 regionals and thus more teams should get invited.
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A points system based on performance along with awards (basically, the Michigan system) would be perfect.
a RCA doesn't entitle you to a championship entry. your robot has to perform remotly well to qualify. winning a regional as a 3rd alliance partner on the #1 alliance at a small regional won't qualify you for championship backing into a rookie all star because your the only rookie at the event won't get you a spot at championship ... but of course, FIRST won't fly with it. this program isn't about the robots. |
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Well if we go that route: Regional Competitions > do a West Championship, Midwest Championship, Northeast Championship, Southeast Championship > all winners + finalists get into Worlds then RCA(From regional championships, dont have a specific number), RAS(from each regional competition), and EI(From regional championships, dont have a specific number) get to compete then MSC qualifying system for the rest.
(Based on Basel's post) *Or the extra slots could be given by best overall record |
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What about Hall of Fame teams? Shouldn't they get an automatic invite?
How about the previous year's champions? Regarding the EI and RCA winners - wouldn't those teams represent the ideals of FIRST - building inspirational teams and machines through the use of science and technology? This is a tough one. It's a good thing we've got a lot of smart people thinking about it. Also, when we start splitting up into regions, we've got to remember - this isn't Nationals. This is The World. |
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It'd be a shame if it came down to it, but they could always just not qualify the 3rd robot on the winning alliance.
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Folks seem to be fixated on the "six or seven teams" part than the "per regional" part. Who says every event has to be a regional?
I know we compete at two events because we ALWAYS do better at our second event. It's happened every single season 2815's competed in FRC*. *Okay, so it was hard to improve on regional champion this season...but even then, we ran better in qualification rounds at Palmetto. If FIRST were to stage some more district-esque second-tier events, even without a formalized district system in an area, it might be able to reduce the number of regionals required to meet the needs of teams. It might be difficult to convert smaller/weaker existing regionals to these events, especially events in the Middle of Nowhere, but it would reduce the number of Championship slots needed. |
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I would be in favor of not qualifying the 3rd robot from the winning alliance.
1) It would not create awkward situations like they have in FTC where the top pick might decline so they can be a captain and have a better chance at qualifying. 2) I think the #10-16 picks would be happy enough to play in elims and have a chance at a banner. 3) There is some awkwardness with the #8 and #9 picks since they are essentially equally seeded. One could argue in favor of allowing all three teams to qualify in cases when the #8 seed wins the event. 4) This move would increase the competitive level of the average team at the Championship. It would be nice to see a Championship that was more competitive on average during qualifiers than MSC. Accomplishing that while appropriately recognizing and inspiring the RCA / EI / RAS award winners is an interesting challenge. |
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personally, i would prefer that nationals be about having the 350 most competitive robots in the world there. i realize this would exclude many teams (mine included) but i think that the level of competition there would be even more insane than it has been ever.
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I personally always thought that it should be regional winners and then the top OPR teams going but since that would never in a million years get the OK, you have to come up with other ways to get the good teams in.
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Team B could be a middle tier team with not as tough matches, and end up with a 14-4-2 record. According to this, Team B should "move on" because they are the "better" team. It may not happen when many teams have near perfect or perfect records, but when looking between 2 teams that are close to the cut, that schedule could make a difference. |
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While I'm at it, I suppose I'll examine the other slots: Rookie Allstar: I would suggest not qualifying RAS teams. But keep the award around. Chairman's Award: I'd send all of these teams. I feel happy sending a Chairman's Award winning team to the CMP even if their robot is awful, and I think most of them have fairly competitive robots anyway. Engineering Inspiration: Similar feelings to RCA award. |
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If RCA winners were not given an automatic invitation to the Championship, and the award were to be judged like the website award: A large part of the determination of the Chairman's Award is the presentation. If some teams didn't qualify based on points, they might be unable to send a small delegation of members to St. Louis to make the presentation, and thus would be out of the running for the award unless some major changes were made to the judging process. That's why I don't think that that change will happen. Come to think of it, there is probably already some policy set in place for teams who win an RCA but cannot attend the Championship. I don't know what it would be - does anyone know if one exists, and if so, what it is? ---- In MI, winning a district no longer guarantees you a spot at States. However, each team is guaranteed two events. If the same exact point system was applied to the entire program, there would be problems. If the rankings were based off of one event, I think that there would be several ties for spots. Additionally, not all teams have the funding or ability to attend more than one event. FIRST has a huge problem on their hands, and they know it. There are a lot of "what if"s and "on the other hand"s, and in the end there will be some tough decisions to make. I look forward to seeing what they make out of the situation. |
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Assume that FIRST wants each team to at least have the opportunity to experience the Championship every 3-4 years. (So that students could go at least once while they are in high school.) This is basically the system they have now.
How do they do that with 2500 teams? 3000? 4000? I know this is way way outside the box. Two events. One West coast, one East coast/Midwest. Does it lessen any goals of the program? Not really. There are a ton of reasons why something like this might not be feasible. But it's an option. |
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what if they ran 2 championship events, one starting on friday, and going to tuesday, one going from wednessday, and going to saturday. in the same venue. then, the top alliances from every division over both matches face off on Einstein. which will have extensive tv coverage. they would need a smaller venue. so they would be more flexible, a smaller venue would also cost less. and if this were the case, i think that many more of the top rate robots would make it.
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I don't like that system in the least. It's an insult to that team's partners and I'm shocked it exists at all, but it is what it is. |
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I'm not a big fan of not qualifying the third partner of the winning alliance.
Teams in general can be shockingly bad at picking and you end up with great robots that slip to the tail end of the second round. In general the 24th pick is probably weaker than the 16th, but unless the event is very small it's probably not a massive difference. For example 254 was able to pick 111 and then 973 as the 23rd robot picked in the draft on Galileo this year. 973 was the MVP of our alliance and 5th on our pick list. We were utterly shocked that we were able to pick them. We would not have won Championships without them. If that had been a regional and the third pick weren't qualified for champs, that would be a travesty. Obviously that's one extremely specific example and it isn't often that one of the top 8 robots by anyone's metrics falls so far, but we have been lucky enough to have a number of very competitive partners come from the tail end of the draft over the years. |
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If so many people think that RCA, EI and RAS winners should be encouraged to come to championship and not compete, why not restructure championship to allow them a separate competition? I think you should stick to your guns and present FIRST with options that allow this to happen so that the competition is a quality competition. The RCA, EI and RAS winners could have a good time at competition themselves, instead of getting beaten up on the field or even feeling bad for being in a position where they feel they have caused a really strong team to lose the competition. They should come to compete at what they are strongest at. Instead of eliminating the 3rd alliance members, who legitimately helped those teams get there, set up a separate competition for the Chairmans teams.
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I went back and i still support this idea. stick the Rookie All-Star, EI and Chairmans award winners in the heats. and let them compete for spots at the big show.
The RCA winners who didn't get to play in the big show would be able to give their presentations on Tues/Wed/Thurs. so that the winner could be announced either at Opening Ceremonies on Friday (woah, considering the event would technically start Tuesday, that would be awkward). or some other time during the big show. This would make enough room for 564 teams to technically attend the Championship event and have a shot to compete for the World Championship. |
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At the 2009 SD Regional and the 2010 NYC Regional we would simply not have won without our 3rd partner. They were both relentless in playing defense.
It would have been a crime if they had not qualified. |
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District Competition/State Championship Model
It has been discussed before, and I know its gonna happen, eventually. Maybe not this year, or next year, but soon. FIRST is getting too big to qualify 6 teams from every event. At a first glance, this is a total bummer. But when you think about it a little more, the Michigan State Championship this year was AWESOME! Check out the ABC full length feature if you don't believe me (skip the ads): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sq1Lq_n3Tfc Imagine an established district system where EVERY local championship was this intense! Just getting to that level would be so exciting! Obviously, the World Championship would be just that much better, but if FIRST wants to get as big as it is think it wants to, this is how it will need to be. I think California is next for the district model, just saying :) -Mike |
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I don't like any system that would reduce the importance of RCA. RCA winners should go and compete just like any other team that makes it to CMP. Remember that RCA is the culture changing part of FIRST, if you reduce it, then we are just a robotic competition, nothing more.
If an award needs to be removed from qualifying for CMP, I would suggest EI and then RAS in that order. But don't ever remove RCA from the mix. Kara, in answer to your question earlier about RCA winners that don't go to CMP. They have to register for CMP just like any other team in order to compete for CCA. If they don't register, they do not compete for CCA. I do like the idea of having events that do not qualify for CMP similar to what they do in FiM. So have qualifying competitions that lead to regionals that lead to CMP. That should solve things until we get to the size where FLL is and you get to a lottery system and then some of the best teams risk not being able to go to CMP. |
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Some of the EWCP guys and I were talking about this subject actually.
Personally, I think CMP should go to a Michigan State-like qualifying system - weighted in such a way that an event winner or RCA team would automatically qualify. This would also allow 'good' teams who don't win still qualify, especially if they received two finalist awards or something like that... In theory, this could lead to an more competitive event overall (Most teams would get in based on performance on the field) and could result in a more competitive season all together. (teams that usually go to the CMP for 'fun' would now have to earn their way in by performing well.) Just a thought. |
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Someone please remind me what the acronym FIRST stands for. I don't believe the R stands for Robots. (I know, I know, FRC does, but tbtp.)
If we are to Recognize and be Inspired by Science and Technology, then absolutely the RCA, EI, and RAS teams should be included; I'd go a step further and say the RCAs and EIs should get prominent pit locations. Let's celebrate what we intend to celebrate - display the RCAs and EIs as the center of attention. RAS - absolutely should be included. Having worked with a RAS team in 2010, the CMP experience absolutely lit a fire underneath that team that will smolder for years. Having said that, I also agree with what Nawaid said. The idea of a play-in bracket is one worth pursuing - it worked well for VCU BB in March, didn't it? The EIs and RASs are there the same duration as the other teams; they have a play-in bracket on, say, the dormant Einstein field, on Thursday. (I know FLL is there, we can be creative with that) The four winning alliances are plugged in as 8-seeds on Newton, Archimedes, Curie, and Galileo. These teams can get the recognition they deserve; their pit location can be fluid, and it will take some of the pressure off the very crowded A/C/G/N pits and fields. *This is for RAS, EI, and RCA recipients that did not win their events |
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Another vote for the District Event Model as discussed back in 2009:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...district+model Michigan can do it in a state because of the the dense population of teams, but I can see New England doing it as a regional thing. There are plenty of teams in the area that could strongly benifit from lower costs and more field time. I hope this is in the works for the near future. |
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I'm for the Michigan style system because of what happened with my team this year.
For those that don't know know we seeded 2nd at both regionals we went to and ended up as finalists while picking up the GM Inductrial design award at both events and a WFFA at the WPI regional. If we had not been pre-qualified as defending champions we would not have been able to get in off the waitlist/open registration. I'm sure other teams with similar seasons were unable to attend and that is a travesty. I'm also surprised how no one has brought up the fact that there are around 20 "sustaining" teams with atomatic bids to the championship every year. This is another batch of teams that should have to earn their way in at this point. |
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I can see a few ways to handle it:
Going to a district system (at least, doing so the same way that FiM did) won't fix the problem that 80% of the seats at CMP are spoken for before the season even starts, but it might slow the problem down some. I have already said I'm a huge proponent for moving to a district system in Canada for sure. (Canadian teams all hail from within a few hours drive of Toronto (outliers being 1535 from Sault Ste Marie, 1305 from North Bay, and the handful for Quebec teams started in the last couple years + 296), with the exception of 1482 who come from Calgary, AB). Theres a high enough concentration of teams to hold 4 districts (Niagara, Toronto, Waterloo, and Quebec, with a Canadian Championship replacing GTR) Ultimately though, I think the easiest solution is to give the championship event MORE fields. Go to an 8 division setup, with Einstein running a full bracket instead of only Semis and Finals. |
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They are: 16 51 67 103 111 120 151 175 191 236 254 341 359 365 842 There are 7 "original and sustaining" teams that qualify this way, and in my experience, most of them typically qualify by other means anyway. The 7 teams are: 20 - Finalist at BAE 45 126 148 - 2 event Champion in 2011 151 - Also a CCA winner 190 191 - Also a CCA winner So in reality this year, there were only 4 original and sustaining teams that were admitted to championship for that reason alone. |
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There will be 15 HoF teams next year with auto bids: 16, 51, 67, 103, 111, 120, 151, 175, 191, 236, 254, 341, 365, 842, 359 |
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According to the FiM website, 18 teams qualify for the world championships, out of the entire FiM district system. That is 18 teams out of a possible 171. Just over 10%. Now extrapolate that to the 2000 teams in FRC currently, you have just over 200 teams at the Championship. Plus the Oldies/HoF/Former Champion teams, you're looking at 230-240. Seems pretty sustainable to me, until FIRST gets to be 3500+ teams. Thats a good problem to have. Maybe we're talking about different problems. Or maybe I don't understand what you mean by 80% of the seats being spoken for. It seems to me the moving to a district system just makes sense. -Mike |
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I agree, however, MI has grown significantly since the launch of the district model in 2009. In 2008, MI had 3 regionals, each with a population of around 60 teams, with a large overlap between them. (There were 118 MI teams in 2008.)
MI could easily sustain 4 regionals, if not 5 now. FiM is unfairly underrepresented in the current system (also, the district model drives new rookies, because its lower cost) and why I said it won't fix the problems, is if implemented as FiM was, (delete 3 regionals, replace with districts, + MSC, qualify 3 regionals worth of teams from MSC), you havent changed the number of qualifying based seats at CMP, you've simply moved where they're issued from. |
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How about instead of 3v3 starting next year the games are 4v4. I know that that would mean an extra team from each regional would qualify, but having two extra teams on the field at a time would make up for the extra 50 or so teams that qualify.
In this system we could have upwards of 120 teams in each division and still play the same number of matches overall while including 160 extra teams. |
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As more regions adopt the district model (which as I've stated before, seems to be the natural evolution of the program) we will see the strain on Championship spots decrease, as long as they follow the same qualification ratio that FiM does. -Mike |
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Like the idea, but I think FIRST will be rocking the 3v3 for a while. -Mike |
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I dont think that reducing the teams that get to go to the big show is the correct approach. Increasing capacity at CMP is better. If that means moving it to Orlando to be in the worlds largest convention center then so be it.
I did the math a few weeks ago, 10 FRC fields (8 divisions + Einstein/FLL + FTC) CAN be placed in the floor area of the EJD, 4 down each side, plus one between the rows on each end. Get more pit space (as far as I understood, we only occupied part of the convention center), and bam, you have doubled CMP capacity, and just have to adjust the schedule, and speeches and stuff on Einstein to make more time to hold 8-12 more matches on Einstein. It would be tight, yes, but it could be done. Might need a few extra curtains for modifying the directionality of the sound from each field. |
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Not qualifying the third alliance partner for championships? Absolutely horrible idea. It's the alliance that wins a Regional, not an individual team.
Not counting RCA, EI, or RAS for qualifying? Again, absolutely horrible idea. These are the awards that recognize teams who are achieving the actual goals of FIRST. So what do we do? A year or two ago I had a long discussion with my father about this, and basically what came up with as a solution was similar to the Michigan district model, but without the "walled off enclave" of not allowing teams to travel around. So here's our idea: The new model of FRC competition structuring would have three tiers, Tier 1 events are "District" level events with maximum of 30-40 teams, Tier 2 events are "Regional" events with 50-70 teams, and the Tier 3 event is the Championship. Your initial registration of $5000 can be used to apply to two Tier 1 events or one Tier 2 event. Tier 1 events are held in Weeks 0-4, and are all Bag-N-Tag. Tier 2 events are held in Weeks 3-6. Using a points-based system similar to Michigan, winning various awards at the Tier 1 events qualifies you for a spot at a Tier 2 event. Additional Tier 1 events cost $2500 to register, and additional Tier 2 events cost $4000 to register. Eligibility to play at Championships is only available to those who win one of the six traditional spots at Tier 2 events (or have automatic entry, or won a lottery spot back in open registration in the fall). What this allows is for:
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I like the idea; I think it could work out at least as well as the MI district system. |
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I think it's interesting the way the numbers come out when you look at the odds of getting to CMP.
FRC had 2075 active teams this year and 352 get to go. That's about 6:1 FTC had 1500 active teams and 128 get to go. That's about 12:1 FLL had 17100 active teams and 81 get to go. That's about 211:1 So, it's odd that the further you go up the chain, the more likely it is you earn a spot to CMP. One in six FRC teams get to go.... Maybe it's getting too easy... or maybe we're all feeling just a little bit too "entitled". I agree that it's a great learning experience etc. to go to CMP, but if that's the reason we go, let's call it a FIRST Convention and let everyone go. If it really is a WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP... let's make it a bit harder to qualify. JMHO. Not looking to change anyone's mind. Facts from http://www.usfirst.org/aboutus/content.aspx?id=160 |
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How about EI winners get financial grants for their team by whoever's sponsoring the award instead of championship spots?
Just a suggestion, not my personal opinion at all. I just want to see what people think. |
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No problem with it this year right?
For every new regional they add, reduce at large bids by 6. St. Louis is only for two more years. After that, find another larger venue. The bigger the world tournament and with FIRST growing, it just has to get bigger! |
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Give FTC and FLL their own events.
Problem solved. :) |
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I think the Championship qualification system needs some work. If 177 won WPI, 40 would not have attended Championships. If some other team won Smoky Mountain, we wouldn't have seen 71. If 973 won a regional in 2010, they wouldn't have been at the Championship this year. If you can look at Einstein and find that lots of major players wouldn't have gotten there, you have to take issue with the qualification system. Personally, I think 8 smaller divisions would be great. 4 in the stands, 4 in some building near the pits. 60 teams per division. |
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I don't have any suggestions for HOW to make it better because a lot of ideas have been covered already. I can only imagine how difficult these decisions must be for FIRST. However, I just want to echo this sentiment.
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If you remove qualification for the teams that are doing what we're really here for? You've lost the point. Those teams that are getting it right need to be celebrated on a Championship stage just as much as the ones who produce a winning robot. |
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edit: Oh yeah....great idea Art! |
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I think NASA is going to do just that for US Regionals; that will be in addition for EI teams going to Champs. I think Art's idea has a lot of merit. The best part of it will be the greater driving experience teams will have, leading to improved performance. |
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I mean, I remember seeing someone in this thread or another saying that we didnt even use all of the space that the pit area was in. We could put 7 fields in the Dome(6 FRC + Einstein/FLL) and 2 fields in the pits(2 FRC + all FTC). Of course I also did like the idea of having the FLL and FTC events on their own. You could do those events on Monday-Wednesday and have theirs ending right when FRC comes to begin. Of course if they do separate FTC/FLL from FRC, then you could do entirely 7 in the Dome and 2 in the Pits or 6 in the Dome + concert stage, then after Friday, build Einstein where the stage was.
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Art has a great idea, but I have just one concern. What about teams that cant drive to an event or isn't financially feasible to be a part of a district type event? If FRC is a world championships, and it expects teams to grow outside the US, then what? How many of you will be able to participate in the Australia tournament if it indeed happens as planned in 2014? :rolleyes: |
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I do agree with some that have mentioned that we should have more divisions. After attending the championship this year, the possibilities are endless. It's a huge venue. I feel that with correct planning we can have 8 divisions. Einstein can have a whole elimination round to decide the champions. Some of the mentors and I were talking about this same situation and I believe all of us came to the conclusion that someday (maybe soon), 8 alliances will play on einstein and the championship event will be more than 3.5 days event.
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I just had an interesting idea. What if we did something like what the Olympics or FIFA does and hold the CMP every 2 years? Hold all the regular regionals and Michigan districts like we do every year and the 6 teams still gain their spots and qualify for the CMP the following year and teams still qualify the year of the CMP plus Michigan would get 36 slots. Just like now there would also be multi-slots used by teams, so the remaining open slots would be filled by the best remaining teams who didnt qualify(i.e. OPR or record for the combined 2 years) so we would be going away with the waitlist. This would allow for between 500-600 teams attend.
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So, I think the district model works for a lot of regions. One exception: Hawaii. Another: Israel. So, these still run on a regional system, six qualify, etc. By putting a majority of the FRC teams on a district model, you alleviate a majority of the strain on the Championship. Look at any other competitive sport format, and you see this makes sense. Teams don't whine that they don't get to go to compete versus teams across the country. BUT, they can be proud of making it to a STATE or REGIONAL Championship. And then if they make it farther, good for them, they EARNED it. Otherwise, try again next year. PhilBot, the numbers you posted are very thought provoking, thank you. -Mike |
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Art's plan runs 2 major risks:
1.) 2 T1 + 1 T2 requires more time from mentors, students, and the like. Mentors have families, students have school work they already are behind on. 2.) The Tier 2 events, if mostly qualified for (thus paid for with reduced registration fees), will not have the same amount of revenue available to pay for the venue + whatever other costs FIRST imposes. Anyone willing to run the money numbers to figure out a break even cost? (i.e. how many teams have to choose T1 vs T2 for FIRST to maintain its current standard of Regional Events) |
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Besides, don't the FLL (plus JrFLL) and FTC students deserve a chance to be inspired by being part of the World Championships alongside FRC? |
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I think its high time that FIRST started disclosing to us where the money goes. As I did the math earlier today, HQ pulled in nearly $15,000,000 from FRC alone for the 2011 season, never mind FTC and FLL. The only event FIRST HQ puts together for FLL is the World Festival (concurrent with FIRST Championship). FIRST HQ takes $225 to register each FLL team (there exists some 17,000 of them) and doesn't really have to do much for any but the ~100 teams that go to World Festival. AFAIK, FIRST is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, and therefore has to be able to show the IRS that in a given tax year, they make less than some amount of money (I think, I know this is how NPOs work in Canada). |
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Maybe it becomes mandatory that each team has one volunteer for CMP. I am sure each team would be excited to help out. |
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For those interested: FIRST HQ's FY2010 Financials: http://usfirst.org/uploadedFiles/Who...bsite_Copy.pdf
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Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Future CMP idea –
As the # of teams continue to grow, it will soon be impossible to accommodate the growth at the Championship event. Here is an idea to consider. Create 4 smaller regional championship events that would be held on the final week of the regular season, that would establish the teams that would meet at the Championship event, 2 weeks later. The criteria for attending the regional events would be similar to what is used now as criteria for the Championship, only that could be expanded a little as well. The 4 Regional Championship events could be like a super regional event (180 teams, if the game is a 6 team game). That is 720 total teams attending all of the Regional Championship events. I am using the word regional very loosely, and do not imply that regional is geographic dependent. In fact, as teams qualify during the earlier weeks events, they would get a chance to select which Regional Championship event they would like to attend from a choice of the 2 nearest locations to their home state. Details obviously would need to be worked out, but you get the idea. Teams that auto qualify as before, do so, to a Regional Championship event. The Regional Championships would be similar to the format used today at the current Championship event, with slight changes. 2 divisions of 90 teams, with the top 2 alliances from each division meeting to determine the Regional Champion. (Kinda like what happens on Einstein except with 2 divisions instaed of 4) Runner Up of Division 1 plays Winner of Division 2, and Winner of Division 1 plays Runner up of Division 2. Winners meet to determine Regional Champion. The Championship event criteria would be based on certain # of qualifying alliances from each of the 4 Regional Championships. Each Regional sends the 4 teams that played at the end for the Championship. That means 16 alliances (total of 4 alliances from each Regional Event) would go, that is 96 teams. Yes, those alliances at a Regional Championship would stay together and compete at the Championship Event. This eliminates the need for seeding and selection, and the Championship Event could be completed in fewer days and would fit within the larger FTC/FRC/FLL balanced format. It could more easily be televised and or filmed, edited, and produced for a TV special event. Yes, logistics and planning would be needed - but it isn't something that isn't done every year during March madness, or during the Bowl season for college football. And, I'm certain there are alot of things that would need contingency plans for (such as what if a team in one of the 4 winning alliances chooses to or cannot attend the Championship). I haven't gotten all of those bugs figured out. Just thought this might be something to consider one day. As the growth continues, it would be easier to make this model scalable enough to sustain the basic format - for a while. |
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$75K - 100K for T1 $150K - 250K for T2 |
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Little League players all know about Major League Baseball and they don't have their World Series in the same place at the same time as MLB. I think it's perfectly plausible to imagine a future where FLL and FTC participants view FRC teams as the Major Leagues and work toward success in their own programs so that they might, someday, get to be part of an FRC team. I'm playing Devil's Advocate a bit here; there's a long way to go before the above would become reality. If FIRST is going to continue to encourage growth, though, I think they should be equally committed to accommodating that growth at the Championship while continuing to recognize teams as they do currently. If it comes down to spinning FTC and FLL off into their own events, that's how it should be. I think FRC teams being inspired by other FRC teams will go a long way toward making the teams and program stronger than FLL or FTC students doing the same. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
The three tiered model wasn't entirely my idea, it was an Art^2 idea that we hashed out while driving to/from the Bash at the Beach offseason a few years ago. :)
The idea was that T1 events would be relatively inexpensive (like District or offseason events), and would primarily target colleges and universities to host them. T1 events would also have priority for local teams over far away teams, and T1 events could potentially start the weekend immediately after ship date. T2 events would basically be the status quo FRC Regional, although on average they would probably be closer to Championship Division size in number of teams. Teams would have the option at their own discretion whether to compete in T1 events, T2 events, or some combination of both. This is the most fair option going forward because if "walled off" district events are further expanded, it will further restrict the options of other teams. Giving teams the option of how they want to run themselves and how they want to compete is the best option going forward. Mentor/volunteer/student burnout is not an issue, as the decision of where (and how often) to compete at various T1/T2 events is left entirely up to each individual team. For example, we're good friends with a number of other FRC teams in both New England and around the country. If the "walled off" Michigan district model was expanded elsewhere to a New England or Florida model, we'd almost never have the chance to compete with our friends Exploding Bacon unless we were both at the Championships. But under a T1/T2/T3 system, both of our teams could choose one year to both apply for an open spot at the same T2 event. The only major aspect of the T1/T2/T3 idea that would need work is to figure out a system to decide which T2 events a team would compete at if they won enough points from T1 events. Perhaps they would have to preliminarily indicate which T2 event they would want to compete at if they won enough T1 points, and that would adjust the number of "open berth" spots at said T2 event. As for points, getting Chairman's, EI, RAS, or Champion at a T1 event should automatically be enough to get into a T2 event. Getting Finalist and another award should be enough points at getting into a T2 event. Winning Chairman's, EI, or Woodie Flower's at a T1 event would then add you into the running for winning at your corresponding T2 event. EDIT: There was also a proposal a number of years ago as part of N.E.R.D. (New England Robotics Division) to use the extremely high number of offseason events in New England as "feeder events" for a "offseason Championship", where teams who won at smaller offseason events could get points toward being elegible to compete at a "New England Cup" event in the late fall. |
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If it turns out that we have to stay within the confines of the existing regional qualification system for now, then it isn't very productive to simply say that it's an awful idea to take away any of the existing qualification slots. |
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I feel this this championship event problem has already been solved in sports. If you look at all large sports in high schools, they are all tier based systems with a State championship. Its the best way to filter down teams to a championship. The district model will be adopted in California, the question is when. Another regional is probably going to be added next year. Though the biggest concern is the "closed-borders." That problem has also been solved by sports. There are all-comer track meets, where pretty much anyone can sign up until they reach capacity. High school track and field in California is still tiered with league, sectionals (regional) and state. I think it is perfectly reasonable to switch some states (provinces) to district set up. Those like California, who have a lot of out of state teams, can run all-comer regionals. By no means would the district system force a California team to compete in California. A few high schools in California are in fact part of the Nevada interscholastic federation due to being closer to Nevada schools. Also not every state needs to adopt district style events. Not every California sport goes to a state championship, some are only done at the regional level. Determining how teams should qualify from each state is something I going to have to think about longer. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Expanding the District model wouldn't necessarily have to be done along state borders. That happened to be a convenient size unit to use for Michigan in terms of number of teams and number of regionals replaced. Future championship events that lead up to the World Championship - they could be called Conference Championships to distinguish them both from the CMP and from regionals - might be multi-state and might divide some states. For example, a Pacific Northwest Conference might consist of WA, OR and BC. New England might be a Conference. MN and WI could be another.
If there are more Conference Championships set up, there could be a method set up so that teams could choose events outside their immediate area on a space-available basis. Perhaps they could even choose what Conference they belonged to. The biggest problem with a District/Conference/Championship model is what to do about areas that don't have a high enough density of teams to support multiple district events within reasonable travel distance. There would have to be some accomdation for outlying areas like HI and Isreal which can support just 1 event now. That doesn't even consider other countries outside US and Canada that may have only 1 or 2 teams. In addition to team density, there has to be a big enough volunteer base to support the districts. Michigan has enough FIRST-crazed people that volunteer in key positions (like FTA, referee, lead queue) in multiple weeks. In places like OK and MN that have a huge number of 2 and 3 year old teams, are there enough people with some history and experience to volunteer in key roles? It's a big task, but if FRC expands to "every" high school as has been envisioned, there eventually needs to be a plan to accomodate 5 to 10 times as many teams as we currently have. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
State borders, like Eric said, would most likely only work for Michigan. Conferences would most likely be: New England(ME, VT, NH, Mass, CT, PA, NY, RI, NJ,), Southeast(Florida, Georgia, SC, AL, MS,), East(NC, Virginia, WV, TN, KY, DE, MD, DC) Midwest(OH, IN, IL, MO), Frozen North(MN, WI, IA, ND/SD, NE)Southwest(NM, Mexico, Texas, Kansas, OK, CO, AR, LA) Pacific Northwest(WA, OR, ID, MT, WY, AK), West(CA, NV, HI, Utah, AZ), Canadian Conference(need input from Canadian CD members to help out)
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Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Ultimately, I think the solution(s) to our current problems have been touched upon in this thread. Enlarging the amount of FRC teams that are able to attend the Championship event (and that is not the same as making the event itself bigger) and restructuring the regional format as a whole.
But that's not going to stop me from talking. ;) Quote:
You're right, it's not just about the robots. The Chairman's, EI, and RAS teams need to be celebrated. But why are we celebrating them on the field if their accomplishments didn't happen on the field? To demonstrate this point, I'm going to turn to a bit of hyperbole. What if, instead of looking at Championship qualification, we looked at Einstein qualification? What if you had to win an RCA to be able to compete there? Why aren't we celebrating them on the biggest stage that Championship has to offer? Because, at a certain point, the competition is about the robots. When we talk about the "rockstar" teams in FRC, it's generally teams that field great robots. We have a website dedicated to ranking the top 25 competition teams in FRC. An anymous poster who writes a column about teams' chances of winning events. Multi-hour podcasts and video blogs about how teams are performing and whether or not they're going to win. The engineering rock stars of FRC usually come from these celebrated teams. The best part, to me, is that these rock star teams also generally get it off the field as well. There's little surprise to me that our current championship alliance consisted of two hall of fame teams. Only very rarely are the teams that we're celebrating for winning an event teams that "don't get it." Not saying that we shouldn't include RCA, EI, and RAS winners as qualifiers for Championship. Just exploring the other side of the coin for a little while. Quote:
Why is Delaware in a different "conference" than Pennsylvania? There are only two teams in Delaware, and they both attended the Philadelphia regional. Heck, one of those teams has won Philly four years in a row. What happens to Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania in this system? Only 17 of the 39 teams that attended the Pittsburgh regional this year would be allowed to attend whatever event takes it places. More than half of the teams for that event came from places that aren't part of the "New England" conference. I could continue listing cases like this for hours. Dividing up the map into chunks like this simply isn't going to work until there's a much higher team density. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
I was just dividing up the states as states, not as teams in those states. I have no clue where the diversity of teams amongst the individual states are at. I do like the idea of multi-state MSC conferences to qualify for CMP but finding the way to divide the teams up is the hard part.
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Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
If a three-tier system were to hit the contiguous states and Canada, you would register for FRC through a regional cooperative of your choosing. (For instance, I would join the hyothetical FIRST Capital Reigon Co-op, consisting of VA, MD, DC, and NEARBY TEAMS) So, you do not have to be locked into any specific co-op, but whichever one you choose to go into, you work to qualify for that regional championship.
If this system is mandated across all of the contiguous states and Canada, teams are allowed to attend any district event, but they will take their top two district scores to qualify for the regional championship held by the co-op they registered with. This method eliminates teams from being locked out by any border constructed by FIRST. The teams make their own choice for where they want to qualify. While making 15 state and super regional championships, and two traditional regionals, FRC is cutting down on the bids that are spoken for in both RCA/EI/RAS and general champion bids. This has been mentioned in a few different iterations, but I want to mesh the idea above with another: the "Kamen" division. The Kamen division is where all 50 or so teams with RCA/EI/RAS bids will be grouped into. They will have their own pits, and play in the dome on a third field, for the whole competition. Every match they play will feature an RCA, EI, and RAS team in an alliance on both sides. At the end, the top four alliances move into the 8 slot of another division. Another option would be to have Kamen compete like the other four divisions, then make Einstein a "Round Robin" where each team plays the other twice, and the two best records go to a best-of-three finals. There are ways they can make this work for everyone. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
I am not a big fan of separating the RCA/EI/RAS from the teams that make it to CMP based on performance.
These awards represent a key aspect of FIRST that differentiates the program from being just a robot competition. These teams need to be as much a part of the competition as any other team and the spirit of these teams needs to be an integrated part of the whole. If you start to separate them, you will start to lose an important foundational component of FIRST. |
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I definitely agree with you - I didn't mean to say in any way that the competition wasn't about the robots as well...You're 100% right, I love seeing that teams that 'get it' are also the ones producing great robots. I simply wouldn't want to see people overlook the value of the RCA/EI/RAS awards as a reason to be at the Championship event. |
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I cannot predict how this information will or will not affect the topic of discussion here. I could give you some ideas about how it feels for those kids to be able to show their work in such a large venue. If it were up to me, I'd say that any FRC Team would have to have supported at least one FLL or FTC team as part of their qualification for CMP. Separate event for FLL? Thumbs waaaaaaay down for that. |
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I would like to note that an FRC team in every high school doesn't mean an FRC team for every high school. One team can potentially reach a few schools, especially in urban, even suburban, areas. We may only need 10,000 FRC teams to reach every high school. As for expanding the district model, Israel seems like a very good place to try it, once they reach 100-ish teams. Not many foreigners are coming in anyway, and every team could reach every event. At 60 teams, they currently only need about 3 district events, but the National Championship wouldn't be much more competitive outside of more events per team. Still, as Israel grows, that may be another possible district system success. |
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Does anyone have an image or graphic that depicts the number of teams in each state? I know there is one somewhere but I can't find it.
I'm working on taking everyone's ideas and making a structured proposal. |
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They should definitely be in the same place, but I had a better experience when I *wasn't* competing on the dome floor, and I'm not just saying this because I'm an FRC or bust guy. FLL has a much larger impact than FRC does, and it will probably remain this way for quite some time. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Disclaimer: This is mainly to be used as a theoretical possibility to be discussed. It's not the answer nor do I claim it to be. It's a well thought out concept model that incorporates what has been discussed so far. Constructive comments please. Also PLEASE don't just quote this entire post, cause it is long.
We know that the best way to reconstruct the World Championship is to reformat the Regional Competitions. One way that has been discussed is a Regional Championship, and here is my take on how to implement it. FRC Open Events The traditional Regional Competitions will maintain the same process that they always have in past years, but are titled differently. Rather than being a Regional, they are FRC Open Events. So The Midwest Regional would be the "Midwest Open", and the Finger Lakes Regional would be the "Finger Lakes Open". The Events are open to all possible teams as the Open Event can take in, allowing for teams that enjoy traveling to other regionals as they do today to take part in events across the country or over the world. FRC Open Events take place within the first five (5) weeks of the FIRST competition season at the end of the build period. Regional events take on any number of FIRST teams as they can handle (anywhere from 40-60), and give out the same awards. However, the awards will not be worth the same as they have in the past. How do you get into an FRC Open Event? 1 - You must pay the fee required to participate 2 - You must sign up early, before the Open Event is filled. 3 - Everything that is asked of you for any regional today. FRC Regional Competitions Each FRC robotics team is slotted to a Region based on their location. Location can be state based or by specific distances. Each Regional Competition will hold anywhere from 100-120 teams randomly split into two divisions. The divisions will play their own Qualifying and Elimination rounds with the winners of each division competing to be Regional Championship Winners. Similarly to Open Events and Regionals of the past, trophies are handed out - however trophies are not division specific; You will be competition for each trophy over the entire competition field, not just within each division. Based on records and trophies and such, teams will earn invitations to the World Championship. The Regional Competitions are played after the 5 weeks of Open Events and a week off. [/i]How do you get into an FRC Regional Competition?[/i] 1 - You must be from the specific Region the Regional Competition is for. 2 - You must have won any Open Chairman's Award, Open Engineering Inspiration Award, Open Rookie All Star Award, and/or are Champions of a FRC Open Event - each from the current year. 3 - You must have won last year's Regional Competition Chairman's Award, Engineering Inspiration Award, Rookie All Star Award and/or Regional champions - each from the last year only. 4 - If you haven't either of those awards, similar to what is done for the Championship these days, teams will have specific years which they may apply for their region's Regional Competition. This will allow for teams to attend the Regional Competitions without stellar performances throughout the year. And since Regional Competitions have fewer robotics teams to worry about, teams will be able to apply every other year, rather than every three or four years. 5 - Pay the fee required and everything that is asked of you for any other regional today. FRC World Championship Played how it is now, the World Championship doesn't change much. However with this proposal there will be much fewer teams in the World Championship. The World Championship is only available for those who won awards or reached certain achievements in any events in the current year. It is played after the Regional Competitions with a week break in between. So how do you get to the FRC World Championship? 1 - Be one of the original FIRST robotics teams. 2 - Be a Hall of Fame robotics team. 3 - From an Open Event - win the Open Chairman's Award, the Open Engineering Inspiration Award or the Open Rookie All Star Award. 4 - From an FRC Regional Competition - win the Regional Chairman's Award, the Regional Engineering Inspiration Award or the Regional Rookie All Star Award. 5 - Additionally from an FRC Regional Competition - the original top 8 seeded teams from each regional division earn an invitation. In the event of actual ties, the tied teams are also allowed in. Also, the winners of each regional division earn an invitation as well. (In this way, a possible 22 unique teams earn an invitation based on their performance, 25 teams from each Regional Competition when you include the award winners.) 6 - Be last year's World Championship Engineering Inspiration Award winners, Rookie All Star Award winners and World Champions. 7 - Pay the fee required and everything that is asked of you for any Championship today. Notes on the FRC World Championship in this proposal If there were 50 FRC Open Events, (two more regionals than there were last year) and lets say 6 Regional Competitions, that means a total of 333 maximum unique teams will compete in the World Championship. (if my math is right). That is fewer than the number of teams that played this year, but still quite the large pool of robotics teams. Plus, the teams that will be attending the World Championship will always be the best of the best - the top contenders in Regional Competition play, as well as all the great award winners from the current years smaller events. This may be the most controversial paragraph. I'd suggest that while Open Event winners of Chairman's, EI and RAS are accepted to Worlds, it is only the winners of the Regional Chairman's, EI and RAS awards that compete for the World Championship version of the award. Yes. It is unfair that the World Championship is so restrictive and teams must be actually good at what they do in order to get any entry. But isn't that what it's for anyway? Think about most High School Sports. You don't make it to Nationals just by winning in your Regional. You have to compete Regionally before you can make it to States, and you can't make it to the Nationals until you make it past States. It's very "win or go home", and the larger FIRST gets, the more of this reality we have to recognize. Pretty soon, we won't be given a golden ticket to the World Championship. We all will have to earn the right to go. Plus who knows, as FIRST grows maybe there can be a smaller event for average teams to play in as well during the World Championship. While some teams play in the 4-division "NCAA" tournament, somewhere else in the area there can be another 2-division "NIT" tournament. So there you go. Rage and Discuss. |
Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
So the only teams that get invitations are: Winners from Regionals, top 8 seeds from Regionals, RAS/EI/Chairmans from Regionals and Opens?
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EDIT: Think of it the same way I set up the Chairman's award. In order to win the championship Chairman's Award, you need to first win an Open Event Chairman's Award and then the Regional Chairman's Award. So in the same way, in order to get into the World Championship via winning events, you need to win and Open Event, and then win a Regional Championship. Going straight from an Open Event to the World Championship is the actual problem that this proposal is trying to solve. |
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Ok, then so you said the Regionals would have something like 120 teams, but only RCA/REI/RRAS/Regional Champs, Open CA/EI/RAS would get in automatically, how would the others get in?
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Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Perhaps we need to hear about how much bigger, FIRST plans to grow in terms of no. of regionals. As the no. of teams grow, if it only means that current regionals will get larger, it shouldnt affect CMP at all.
For the really large tournaments, make them a 3.5 day event if need be. If these problems wont occur for another 10 years or so, why announce them now? Should the MSC model be done in CA already? I havent heard too many teams complain about not having one. |
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The other half of the robots in the list that don't get their auto-in will have to compete for it. |
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Re: Qualifying for CMP in the future
Another consideration is what could be called a "critical participation number" that is, the number of teams required at the championship event in order to make it economically and otherwise viable. This has been a tacitly been seen up to now in the signup and standby queues currently in use.
How would it be if winning regional events automatically paid the registration for CMP? If a team could not go to CMP, then their registration for the same regional next year would be paid. Some other team could (would) go to CMP in their place by paying the entire CMP registration. Yes, I predict the registration for regionals would have to go up slightly to cover it. |
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"All 50 or so teams" is a far underestimate of the number of teams that win those awards. There will be some "doubles" in terms of teams who win two of those awards and there will be many teams that don't make it to Championship. But with 48 regionals and 3 of those awards per event, we're talking well over 100 teams that make it to the Championship event based on those criteria. Secondly, why are we lumping them in as #8 seeds? Basing it off of these Top 25 rankings, we see four hall of fame teams (16, 67, 111, 254), two regional Chairman's winners (1114, 2016), one Michigan district Chairman's Award winner (33), and four Engineering Inspiration winners (27, 118, 234, 2415). Based on whether or not you accept HoF and DCA winners into the Kamen division, you range from having six to fifteen of the Top 25 teams in one division (of five). You don't have to worry about not having enough talent here to compete against the other divisions, you have to worry about placing all your good teams into one division. Even ignoring the rest of the gripes about separating these teams from the field, you're throwing off the competitive balance by doing this. Quote:
While I've seen a lot of suggestions along those lines, there have been some suggestions to follow different paths as well. Nobody has definitely concluded that this concept is better than all the other possibilities. Heck, we've barely even scratched the surface of what all the other possibilities are. |
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One of the things that's different about FRC is that teams can attend as many regionals as they want constrained only by budget. I can't think of any other sport that works like that, not even FLL. Of course FIRST is all about inspiration and going to events is inspiring. Is going to three regionals more inspiring than two? Perhaps but there is a point of diminishing returns. I suspect most teams going to three or four regionals are doing it to better their chances of doing well on the playing field at CMP.
I bring all this up because one way to make more space in the FRC program would be to limit teams to two regionals. Besides making CMP more equitable it would reduce the number of teams going to CMP. I don't know by how much. I also like the point system being discussed in this thread as well as the idea of eliminating the hall of fame and sustaining team automatic qualification. Setting up a series of super Regionals is the way most other sports would grow. It's asking a lot of teams to raise the money to travel to that event and CMP, though. The district model works well when there are a lot of densely packed teams. It gets a lot more expensive out west. |
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