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#16
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
My simple answer to this complicated question: if you were on Team C, how would you feel about Team B throwing the match?
Looking beyond that single match and championship: how do you want to be remembered? This is very similar to the 6v0 discussion in 2010, most would agree that was a gray area and that was allowed and encouraged by the rules of the game. What I'm trying to say is that, although slightly Naive, I would go with what feels right and not do whatever it takes to win. |
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#17
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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#18
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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6v0 helps everyone on your alliance. It is a strategic move that gets you points and hurts no one. Throwing a match hurts your alliance partners. |
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#19
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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One could discuss the theoretical situation where all 3 alliance partners want to lose for various reasons, but that's not the point of this thread. |
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#20
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
doesn't make sense
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#21
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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To answer your other questions, no, you should not consider the option, and I do not believe it is in the best interest of the team. Matt |
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#22
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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This is bad. It's like doing a commonly accepted action. |
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#23
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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This situation is losing for personal gain. That situation was losing for mutual gain. I see the distinction, but disagree that it isn't the same in some rite. Afterall, both are losing for gain regardless of who benefits. I would never condone losing for gain no matter the circumstance. That is why from my view these two strategies aren't so different. I could see though how a person that strongly supported 6 vs 0 would see a big difference though. Though I never agreed with the line of reasoning, I understand the reasoning you(and many others) used to rationalize it. That sort of reasoning won't work in this scenario so you see it as different. My reasoning for my conclusion remains the same, so I see them the same. It's really a matter of perspective on this one. In short, I wouldn't throw out the comparison completely. Yes, there is a distinction. But it was bound to come up at some point and should not be thrown out as a precedence. It shows people are willing to lose for gain in the world of FIRST. The question is: how many people must gain for it to be worth considering? 1 out of 6? 2 out of 6?....5 out of 6? A line must be drawn somewhere and I would be interested to know what number of people on the field must benefit from you purposefully losing to make it acceptable. |
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#24
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
6v0 wasn't losing in the sense that it resulted in anything bad happening to anyone. The only similarity between 6v0 and "losing" is based on societal constructs.
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#25
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
By this definition, you can't lose if you gain an advantage from it. Kind of an interesting solution to the thread's question.
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#26
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
Except wins and losses weren't used for the seeding in 2010. So losing the match really didn't impact you in any way.
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#27
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
You can either choose to do the right thing or the wrong thing, and it's pretty clear that "anything you can get away with is OK" is the wrong thing.
How would you feel if YOUR alliance partner was throwing a match at your expense? Why would you do that to someone else? This isn't really that complicated. |
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#28
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
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The catch is that the premise of the qualifying rounds is that the teams with which you have been randomly allied will work with you in order to win the match. The issue here is not whether "throwing the match" is right or wrong, but whether betraying your alliance partners is right or wrong. Kind of makes it a simple choice, doesn't it? Jason |
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#29
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
How is losing on purpose to hurt your alliance parter worse than winning on purpose to hurt your opponent? It's a competition, someone's going to get the short end of the stick. All we hope for is that the best teams do the best, and if team B is the best team, don't they deserve to be in the eliminations?
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#30
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Re: Losing on Purpose to Gain Advantage
Well, one is betraying your teammates and one is a hard fought honest victory against opponents. If you don't see the difference in that, I'm not really sure what to say.
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