I would be skeptical of OPR this year. While the game appears 'separable' (as is needed for good OPR correlation to manual scouting), it really isn't very much, if at all.
For starters, lets look at auton. Assuming most* teams will not be able to take all three containers or totes with them into the
Auto zone, then getting any score
at all in auton relies on your partner's help completely.
Onto teleop, lets say you're a robot that just stacks totes. Some matches you have not much help, and pretty much just stack totes. You get X amount of points for that match. Now you happen to be paired with a robot that tops all of your stacks with containers and effectively triples their value to 3X. The score for that match was completely dependent on the combination of having a robot that could make tote stacks and a robot that could top them with containers. So does that mean that other robot is twice as valuable as you?
The effect if much easier to see on the container stacking bot. When he was with you, he had very tall stacks to top off, effectively adding BIG points to the match score. But what if he isn't paired with any tote stacking robots? He probably contributes close to 0 points.
In a good OPR game, the score an alliance can produce should be the same if they all compete together on one field or if they all compete separately on three different fields by themselves and then total their individual scores up. As apposed to something more like 2013, this game is not like that in the slightest.
*This is really anyone's guess now, as it is every year.