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Re: "Random" match Schedules
I recommend that someone write a short program which takes a look at the ranking after the "seeding rounds" take place. Look at the top 10 teams, see if they had repeat opponents, and note the final rank of those opponents.
Remember that rankings are very important to how alliances are chosen for the final rounds.
Does the data show a pattern?
I did this check by hand for the PNW Regional. (So my count may be slightly off.) There were 54 competitors.
Rank 1
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 54
Rank 2
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 32
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 43
Rank 3
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 52
Rank 4
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 50
Rank 5
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 18
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 44
Rank 6
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 51
Rank 7
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 45
Rank 8
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 46
Rank 9
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 53
- faced the same competitor 4 times who finished with a rank of 33
- faced the same competitor 2 times who finished with a rank of 35
- faced the same competitor 2 times who finished with a rank of 49
Rank 10
- faced the same competitor 8 times who finished with a rank of 48
The PNW Regional data shows a pattern. Not to take away from every team who performed well, but is this really the "intended" outcome? Note that the rules clearly state the schedule cannot be changed after it is published.
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Keith Watson - Professional Software Engineer
No relation to "Kevin" Watson, who created the camera tracking code.
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