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Unread 24-04-2007, 23:11
Jeff Rodriguez Jeff Rodriguez is offline
Too young to be an 'old guy'
FRC #0155 (Technonuts)
Team Role: Teacher
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Rookie Year: 1999
Location: Newington, CT
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Re: My Team Needs Help Scouting

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Matt View Post
There are a few tips and tricks to scouting I've found out, but I'll ask one of my friends who is better with this stuff to post too (where are you Jeff?)
Sorry, I had class.

Here are the things I've learned that I believe are the most important:
1) If someone doesn't want to scout, do make them. You will most likely get rushed, incomplete, inaccurate data.
2) Scouts should be knowledgeable. Don't send the freshmen who spent the whole season on the Vex team. If the scout doesn't know what they're talking about, you won't get good information. Crap in - crap out.
3) Only get relevant data. The last thing you want to be doing Friday night is spending 5 hours just making sense of all the crap you've written down.


Our scouting at championships was pretty successful this year, I'll explain it. During matches we had a few people watching and keeping track of who was scoring, who was lifting bots and who was climbing bots. All of this was entered into an excel sheet. Basically, every time points were scored, we wrote it down. You can see how it all worked here.
The second part was pit scouting. We had a pit sheet that only had information about ramps and ground clearance. We decided that it was most important to know what ramps we could get up and what ramps other teams could get up.
That's all we kept track of. Match strategy was formed based on who could ramp and how many ringers you could score. Our selection list was also based off these numbers.
We had 2 or 3 team members, an adult mentor doing data entry, and the drive team doing everything. It was a lot of work for those people, but generally I think it worked well.

There's also a lot of information about about keeping people motivated and valued, but that's a thread in itself. Read Coach John Wooden's book.
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173, student: 1999-2002
173, mentor: 2005-2010
155, teacher: 2011-

Last edited by Jeff Rodriguez : 24-04-2007 at 23:27.