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#16
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
Apparently the number 1 seed has never won the West Michigan District event. Granted, FiM has only been around for 3 years.
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#17
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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I made a similar one back after that season, but for different reasons. In 2007, I noticed that a lot of the lower seeds were winning due in large part that they had 1st pickings of the "ramp" bots that gave a relatively large bonus for winning matches. With proper defense and pinpoint scoring to block the multiplier on certain pegs of the rack, they could come back and beat you on the bonus. The bonus back then was much more difficult than this year. This season, your bonus is independent of an alliance partner and could be done entirely by yourself. Everyone can technically have the same type of 1 to 1.x sec minibot. The formula to creating one is out there and can be done independently of your robot between regionals. You would not (nearly impossible for most) be able to go from a non-bonus bot to one all of a sudden in your next tournament. IMO, that game gave every alliance the best chance to win a regional. You had to be very, very careful on who you picked in trying to beat out the other alliances. |
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#18
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
Looking at the data for #1 alliances going back to the Palmetto Regional's inception:
2004 (343/1402/665): Out in quarterfinals (three matches), #2 won 2005 (1251/25/301): Finalists (three matches), #2 won 2006 (68/180/1028): Semifinalists (two matches), #6 won 2007 (1251/1758/1626): Finalists (three matches), #2 won 2008 (343/342/393/804): Finalists (four matches), #7 won 2009 (3025/2815/1379): Finalists (two matches), #3 won 2010 (343/1261/1398): Champions (three matches) 2011 (180/2363/2815): Champions (three matches) 2005 was the start of 3v3 play, and 2006 was the start of the serpentine draft. Take from this what you will. |
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#19
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
Here is some previous years threads with data:
My 2009 prediction & results of 50% Alliance #1 2008 with some '07 & '06 data 2006 The Philadelphia Regional is an interesting case as far as #1 seed vs the field. Last year I successfully predicted that the #1 seed would win Philly due to the new seeding algorithm (also contains my 09 spreadsheet). This a major streak breaker because before 2010, no #1 seed had won Philly since 2001. Philly tends to have a large similar top tier of offensive robots and lots of defensive bots that causes a lot of upsets during quals and elims. I don't have the % of #1 Alliance champions in 2010, but I suspect it was higher than usual. The scheduling algorithm (as much as I disliked it) did a good job of seeding the top robots high regardless of schedule difficulty. This year with a return to WLT system, I have been more interested in the how OPR correlates to event winner. The team with the highest OPR during the quals almost always wins the event even if they are not in the #1 alliance (won all the Week 1 events). In Chesapeake where the top team didn't win (one of the few cases), the alliance with the highest combined OPR did win. |
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#20
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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This year, especially in many of the weaker regionals, you've seen only a bare handful of robots that can deploy minibots consistently. With the minibot race consisting of more than half the score of a normal match, putting two teams together who can both deploy minibots is an advantage that is nearly impossible to overcome. As the season progresses the games will begin to rely more on hanging because more robots will have minibots. I would expect Michigan State Championship to be that way, however I would expect the National Championship to be slightly less so since so many teams attend because they can pay the fee without having to qualify based on robot quality (not that there's anything wrong with that system - I'm just saying). |
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#21
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
As people have stated, statistically, it does make sense for the #1 seed to win the regional most of the time.
2009 was our craziest year. At Peachtree, we were ranked like 43 out of 48 teams, were picked by the #8 seed 2655 (I think they were originally ranked #13, but my memory is foggy), and went on to win the regional along with 832. That was ridiculous. A few weeks later (also 09), we were picked by the #3 seed at Palmetto and won with them. The #3 seed (1771) was actually the #1 seed we had beaten earlier at Peachtree, while the #1 seed at Palmetto was a rookie team with box on wheels that could only deliver the super moon-rock thing (supercell? I can't remember the official name) and was rejected five or six times during first-round alliance selections. On the flip side, the two regionals we've attended so far this year (Alamo and Peachtree), the #1 seeded alliance has won both. |
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#22
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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#23
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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I hope I'm wrong. I'd love to see a whole series of upsets at Nationals. |
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#24
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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Also in our first regional this year (Boilermaker) the number 1 seeded team chose the number 2 seeded team and they completely shut destroyed every other alliance because no one could stop them from scoring or deploying their minibots (the fastest at the event). |
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#25
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
I think this is partially due to the fact that we've seen this game not too long ago.
Teams that had people around in 2007 REALLY knew what to expect. They designed their robots to be faster, stronger, more agile, and smarter than how they were in '07. Which is why I think we see this large gap between the teams that really can and the ones that are able to. - Sunny |
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#26
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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#27
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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#28
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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But yeah, from what I've seen, this year's seed rankings have been slightly more reflective of a team's merit (which may not have anything to do with this year's game, because it seems that teams with minibots automatically seed high), and so it would make sense for the top-seed alliance to win. |
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#29
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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#30
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Re: 1st Seeds Win
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On the other hand, man is that an instructive story to tell at workshops. |
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