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Unread 27-03-2006, 19:41
Unsung FIRST Hero
Andy Grady Andy Grady is offline
I'm done being quiet!
FRC #0131
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: May 2001
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Location: Manchester, NH
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FIRST 101 [3/27/06]

Hello again class, time for another action packed session of FIRST 101. Today we look back at the evolution of...

THE ARENA

I know this may be hard to believe, but FIRST wasn't always held inside of a massive arena or dome. Back in the day, much like current day offseason events, the competition was held in a high school gym. FIRST actually started at Memorial High School in Manchester NH with its innagural National Championships. It would soon move back and forth from Memorial in Manchester, to Nashua High in Nashua New Hampshire (currently known as Nashua South High School).

As the years went by, FIRST got bigger. Soon the national event had to be moved to a larger venue...which is where Disney World came into play. Back in the American Pavilion, about 75 teams would show up for the Nationals in Disney in its first year outside of the high school gyms. The beauty about the American Pavilion was that it was a good 5 minute walk from pit to field..."uphill...both ways...and we had to walk back down the hill to give the one pair of shoes to our brothers and sisters so that they could walk up." (credit my old CADD teacher Paul Morrison for the quote).

Regional events steadily got bigger. The New England Regional would move from Memorial High School to New Hampshire College (now known as Southern New Hampshire University...current location for the official kickoff). As a matter of fact...the events got so big...that even the college gym couldn't handle it. It was quite an experience having to wait outside of the high school gym instead of being in the stands watching your team...all because there were so many people there that fire codes would be broken. (Joke is on them, I still found a way in ) Even today, the spirited electricity that was contained in that gym by the huge crowds is something that hasn't been effectively replicated even in the large arenas with tons more people!

Since those days, the competition has blossomed into a major happening. Large arenas and now the Georgia dome are cluttered with people.

When you go to current competitions, and you complain about pits that are too small, not enough seating, expensive food, bad food, etc, etc...consider this...

Imagine your current pit...now shrink it by 2 to 3 feet squared...

Imagine the seating currently...now eliminate about 5000 seats with more people in the gym than you currently see in regionals today...oh..and that is if you are allowed in by the firemen...

Imagine the current (all be it expensive, you are right) selection of chicken fingers, pizza, hot dogs, sausages, hamburgers, fries, pretzels, soda, water, etc...now make the lines three times as large with the selection of only a burger, dog, chips, and soda...

Ah yes...the old days my friends...they were great...

But at the same time...sometimes you don't realize just how lucky we have it.

Did I mention that back in those days...there weren't even such things as webcasts?...Thats a subject for a different time though.

Class Dismissed.

-Professor Grady
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