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#1
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My case against <G14>
(Note to readers: I know this post is long! There are a lot of things wrong with this rule, in my opinion... if you're planning to respond, or even if you're not, please try to read the whole thing, or at least the end. That's where I tried to put the meat of my argument.)
For those who haven't yet memorized the rulebook (shame on you!), here is the rule I am referring to: Quote:
Anyway, as you might have guessed, I don't like this rule. In my opinion, it is a bad idea, badly thought through and badly implemented. There are way too many things that can go wrong with it and very few things that it does right. I'll lay out my objections in detail: -What happens if an alliance scores zero? I guarantee it will happen at least once. Boom, three teams are screwed for their next match, having done absolutely nothing. Yes, an alliance could score on themselves, but that is certainly not professional and far more insulting then gracious. This is what I mean by "badly thought through". -"Shenanigans" are far too easy. I don't hope or believe that they will happen, but even in FIRST there are some "bad apples" who may take advantage. I'm sure you can figure out how to yourself, and there are probably other threats about this as well. But even if it doesn't happen, there will naturally be speculation, and we really don't need that. -Some of the most exciting events at any FIRST competition are when an alliance reaches a milestone. I remember in 2005, my rookie year, when our very good 'bot was paired with the always extraordinary 254 and another good team I have forgotten since then. The other alliance put up a good fight, but we managed to complete a "clean sweep" and cover every goal, and when the final tetra was placed at the buzzer the entire crowd went wild. Of course, if we had had this rule that year, we would have had to stop halfway through and throwing blue tetras on top of ours. Good luck seeing any high scores this year; I imagine that half or more of the endgames will end up with Super Cells being purposely witheld or own goals being scored just to avoid this rule. Try explaining that to the random spectators-just a reminder, they do exist, and they are crucial to FIRST's growth. -Imagine this scenario: Rookie team 3456 has had a lot of trouble scoring or playing defense due to a reluctant powertrain and balky gripper, which prevents them from grabbing any Super Cells. But in their next match, they are paired with two expert teams, both of which are agile enough to avoid being scored upon (or they have the mythical trailer cover!). Happy that they finally have a chance for a big score, they send their coach over to the strategy meeting, where teams 123 and 456 are almost ashamed to tell them: Sorry guys, you can't score too much, or we'll have a <G14>... Or think of the rookie team member who designed some part, or the veteran that wants to go out with a bang, both prevented from seeing their robot act out to its full potential. Or the human player (many teams use rookies as human players) who has to be told not to score, not too much, possibly while being watched by friends, or family, or simply wanting to have fun and make the most of their competition. What I'm trying to say here is that there should never be a rule that prevents teams from taking an opportunity to score. I'm not a big fan of the "ranking score" system (where higher opponents' score=good for you) in the first place, but at least that encourages offense (good for spectators) and allows smaller teams to do more. This rule, by contrast, encourages lower scoring and the shutting out of "minnow" teams. -A team should not be punished for something they did not do. Seems simple, right? But not this year-if you're paired with a powerhouse team, and they don't get their score quite right (maybe the scorers messed up? Maybe the other team got a penalty? Who knows?), *you* take a penalty in *your* next match. How is this fair, and what purpose does this serve? Of course, there is no way to figure out individual scores, and no way to make this rule fair, which is probably a good reason it never should have happened in the first place. Even more unfairly disadvantaged are ~six~ teams that lose one of their alliance's cells just for having the audacity of being partnered with a team that scored a lot the last match. Does this sound wrong to anyone else? -The entire idea behind the rule-that blowout winners are somehow doing something wrong, and need to be punished, or that the playing field of what appears to be a close game needs to be artificially leveled-is, in my opinion, horribly wrong and misguided. That idea might get some traction in the lowest levels of Little League, or JrFLL maybe. But come on, we're dealing with high school students here. There is just as much to be learned, if not more, from a blowout, devastating loss then from a big win. A loss can inspire a team to action, teach them what they did wrong, and give them a glimpse at what to do to become really successful. And I'm don't subscribe to the theory of "students are inspired by watching big money, engineer-built robots crush them", but trying to essentially keep the scores down until the finals doesn't help anybody. Some of these are niggling little issues. Others are not. But when you have a rule that does this many things wrong, it needs to have a pretty compelling reason for inclusion. I cannot think of one. FIRST cannot honestly believe that spectators or team members will respond to the false excitement that this rule attempts to generate. And my idea of "strategy" is not sandbagging or scoring own goals. Those correspond better to my idea of a game that is a joke. What ever happened to recognizing excellence? <G14> will make the game less exciting, less pure, less legitimate, and take away the learning that is supposed to be inherent in this competition. I presume that the GDC thought it through and found some reason it deserves inclusion in this year's rulebook, but I would much prefer if it was one of the victims of the first Team Update. If anyone wants to chime in with their idea of a reason, I'd be glad to hear it. EDIT 4: This post has been revised, so to speak. I've added a couple things and tried to reorganize it a little bit. Last edited by bduddy : 05-01-2009 at 19:31. Reason: The mods seem to get it, but boy this post has gotten long! 5 edits |
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#2
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Re: My case against <G14>
Sure it seems like a semi-feasable idea to level out the field, but there should be no rule, ever, that prevents teams from showing their true strength, then recieve a penalty for it. I firmly believe that this rule will cause MAJOR sandbagging, and will cause teams to not "shoot for the moon" with their robot designs. I would be really happy for this rule to be either obliterated or drastically changed, maybe only involving personal scores and the only penalties distributed are individual.
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#3
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Re: My case against <G14>
My case against the rule regards the points that you can score with a EMPTY CELL (2). As the rule states now,
Quote:
Last edited by Dave McLaughlin : 05-01-2009 at 00:47. |
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#4
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Re: My case against <G14>
Quote:
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(Note: This isn't directly in response to your post, but I keep coming up with new reasons this rule is bad all the time... )Teams taking advantage of this rule was really more of a minor concern of mine, and I believe as you do that none will try it. But there shouldn't even be the opportunity, and even if it doesn't happen, team members (and spectators "in the know") will speculate whenever some team has a problem, and we don't need that. As for your point on the ranking score as "strength of schedule", I honestly hadn't thought of that. I guess it could work that way, but using opponent wins would probably be better, and the manual even says: Quote:
Quote:
The whole purpose of boards like this is for debate, after all! And by the way, I have edited my first post (and will be doing so again right now, argh!), so you might want to look at that... |
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#5
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Re: My case against <G14>
I have a few problems with this post.
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).Overall, I disagree with your philosophy regarding the rule. I do not think it will keep teams from scoring a ton of points. The matches will not be less exciting simply because teams are afraid of the 2x or 3x score. Also, it will be very hard to lose all super cells. All 3 teams in an alliance would have had to have won by 3x in their previous match for there to be no possible configuration of human players which could get a super cell in play. Example:Team A, B, and C are aligned for match 100. Team A won 97-17 in its last match, team B won 30-8 in its last match, and team C won 50-20 in its last match. Teams A and B both lose 2 of their non-moon rock playing pieces. Team C only loses 1. Therefore, team C could position its human player at either of the fueling stations and the alliance would have one super cell still possible. This is assuming they could not somehow get a super cell which the other alliance introduces into the crater and score it before the game ends. Sorry if this message seems to be rude or inconsiderate on my part, I just want you to see that perhaps it is not such a big deal and in fact might add an interesting element to the games. |
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#6
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Re: My case against <G14>
I agree that it is not such a big deal, but I want to point out that if indeed you loose 3/4 EMPTY CELLS, you loss 15x3 points for the SUPER CELLS you cannot acquire and 6 points for scored EMPTY CELLS... I understand that with 120 balls on the field loosing 3 is like a flashlight in a cave, but three balls is still a loss.
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#7
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Re: My case against <G14>
Quote:
Quote:
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#8
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Re: My case against <G14>
I don't really like this rule eather. My thoughts on it is that one teams outcome in a match shouldn't have any effect with them on their next match. It also say that it punishes the next two teams in the allience with something that they might have had nothing to do with.
Example: "Team A" wins with a 2x score, but in their next match "Team B" and "Team C" on their allience had close score in the previous match. But yet they are the ones in the end that are taking the hit with "Team A". It also can go agienst a team during team selection during elemelnations. Who would want to pick "Team A" to go with them to elemanation when they lost a SUPER CELL from a previous match. I have always believed that no match should exchange guidlines onto your next match. You can have a 2x blow out prevention rule to let them know that thats not the intentions of the game, but to punish them onto the next match. I don't think thats right. The thought of losing a potional SUPER CELL isn't what really concerns me as much as what I stated above. Learn from a misake in a match but don't cury the misake onto the next match. More of a.. Learn from previous mistakes, but leave the past behind you. |
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#9
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Re: My case against <G14>
Perhaps I should ask something else-what is the good that this rule does?
Many people have suggested that it "adds strategy" to the game. Sure, I won't deny that. But does this game need the added "strategy" of sandbagging? Sandbagging is never fun to watch and less fun to do, especially for team members enthusiastic to show off what they made. And scoring on yourself? I mean, come on. How are you going to explain that to drop-in spectators or NASA TV viewers? (They do exist, you know. They're also one of the most important audiences FIRST needs to target.) And I don't know about you, but I'd feel better losing 50-10 then if the score was 40-30 and 20 of those points were own goals. As for the "preventing blowouts" rationale, my thoughts on that can be found in the initial post. We are all mature enough here to take a big loss and consider how we can use it to move forward. |
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#10
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Re: My case against <G14>
Outscoring my opponents by 2x... this is a problem I'd like to have.
I would feel more comfortable if a minimum was placed on this rule for exceptionally low scoring matches. There is also the chance for abuse by surrogates. A surrogate could run up the score and hurt their alliance partners in the next rounds without being affected themselves. But then again they could just throw the match if they really wanted. GDC one fix that needs to happen, if a team is penalized from a previous match and they are a surrogate for the current match, their penalty should be postponed until their next non-surrogate match. |
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#11
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Re: My case against <G14>
Say your next match was very important. You are currently up 65-30, do you take a penalty to avoid doubling? Encouraging penalties should never be the result of a rule.
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#12
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Re: My case against <G14>
Quote:
And hopefully there are more people on now (as opposed to 3 EST ), so I'm eager to hear an actual reason why teams that win by a lot should be punished. |
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#13
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Re: My case against <G14>
I agree. <G14> is, in my opinion, not in the spirit of FIRST. When has the game not encouraged us to do the best we possibly can? Also there is a possibility of double penalizing a losing team. Think about this teams 1,2,3 play teams 4,5,6 and the 1,2,3 alliance triples the score of the other alliance. Then the following match the alliance 1,2,6 exists: team 6 has just been PENALIZED for LOSING, because two of their partners are out 2 game pieces. Then we consider the possibility of that alliance losing and the additional consequences there. There are too many possible negative ramifications of this rule.
The 0 score argument is interesting as well. What if an alliance has 12 points and you have 20, but they were penalized twice during the match. Their score is now 0 and yours is 20 and that sucks, because you've tripled their score with 20 points ![]() |
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#14
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Re: My case against <G14>
It was made to even the playing field which is in the spirit of FIRST, but since FIRST uses competition as means to achieve it's goal... It is a paradox, well lets solve the paradox and delete <G14>.
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#15
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Re: My case against <G14>
Alright, I really am hoping that you can all get every empty cell to the fueling station and then introduce every super cell EVERY match. As I said before, it will be extremely hard to eliminate all four super cells and impossible to eliminate more than half of the empty cells for a match. In that case, you have three aligned teams who all dominated their previous opponents. Perhaps you design a strategy which does not require the use of super cells or empty cells as a key component. That way, you will be zero-cell-proof.
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