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#1
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
In 2010, FIRST made it abundantly clear that 6v0 was not the way they wanted to see matches played. If that's your best analogy, I'm unswayed. Actively "sabotaging" the co-op bridge crosses the line, in my opinion. And I'm a proponent of using seeding strategy.
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#2
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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You could also look at a simpler form of this strategy where you don't have to play with the high ranked team at all. Instead three or four games from the end powerhouse team X goes to team Y and says: "Hey, we really want you as our third, but we are sure someone else will pick you before we get a chance. Can you pretend you are having problems to drop your ranking and desirability?" Then team Y does exactly that and everyone skips over them in selection assuming they are broken until we get to team X who gets a magically repaired awesome third pick. That strategy has been open to teams for many years, but it has not been used to my knowledge. The fact that the community opposes this suggests you will have a hard time finding people who agree with throwing a match and pretending your robot is broken at the same time ![]() Quote:
Last edited by lemiant : 12-03-2012 at 16:33. |
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#3
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
They issued a VERY rare change to seeding rules after Week 1, adding 5 qual points to the match winner's qual score, in addition to the coopertition score, after seeing 6v0 all over the place. 6V0 became a much tougher decision after that.
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#4
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
I was under the impression that the change to the scoring system was because of how many lower quality robots were ending up in the top 8 that resulted from the original ranking system.
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#5
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
That too--partially. But the original ranking system didn't care if you won or lost. 6v0 + a robot that didn't pass inspection/take the field landing in the top 8, and they added the 5 points to eliminate both.
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#6
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
I think Mr. Lim provided a great perspective on all of the issues involved here, even more than I realized.
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...&postcount=171 I understand that FIRST eventually came out against 6v0, but they have never taken action to prevent teams from scoring on their own alliance while (in the past) maintaining systems to encourage it. I guess we'll learn their intentions for this year tomorrow... at least, I hope so! |
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#7
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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Are you trying to have your alliance win, or just ultimately you win in the end? You are only with your alliance (in qualifying matches) for one match, so why feel some grave obligation to win as an alliance as long as you do well in then end? Then the morals of FIRST come in, and it is a whole jumble of opinions and strategies. Man! Mind = Blown |
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#8
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
Mr. Lims post is easily one of the defining posts of this season. I shall ruminate further upon my opinions on it, but I would just like to get that out there.
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#9
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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He mentions imagining if 36 teams have different answers for the questions he raises. For Hartford the number climbs to 64 teams. I also submit that merely counting teams greatly oversimplifies the opinion situation vis-a-vis coopertition (my spell checker still does not like this word, Mr. Kamen.) If team A is approached by team Z, what actually happens is a member of team A is approached by a member of team Z. How can either of them be assured that any of team A, Team Z, the alliance containing team A, or the alliance containing team Z, is authentically being represented by these guys in their conversation. Add to that, the possibility that there are more than two central nervous systems in the conversation, and even if no other team is represented, yet another dimension is created. Now go and multiply that by 36 or 64 and you begin to have an appreciation for the chaotic potential of this process. Mr Lim is right to mention the highly charged environment. It accurately serves to predict that a team that comes to a tournament without knowing this situation and without having formed a comprehensive consensus about all of the ramifications, will be at a great disadvantage in whatever negotiations in which it engages during the tournament itself. At the very least a team must establish a coopertition liaison leader for the purpose of carrying on a more or less cogent representation of the team's position on the matter. If you're talking with a member of another team about this, how will you assure yourself that you understand that team's intentions as a result? Is it too late to make 64 badges for the coopertition liaison from each team? (after the manner of the safety captain?) Last edited by Bill_B : 13-03-2012 at 00:39. Reason: team algebra too fuzzy |
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#10
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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#11
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
Seriously though; there are plenty of gray areas but there are some areas that are not gray. Some may be:
Probably an oversimplification but if you think its a bad strategy to balance don't do it. I think balancing at the expense of winning (e.g. you are down by 5 pts and you balance on the middle bridge rather than on your own) is about the dumbest idea ever but that is just me. |
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#12
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
Really? How do you plan out a strategy to balance on the coopertition bridge then? Or do you mean something else by "collusion"?
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#13
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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#14
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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I don't recall any rule for this year saying that you can't score in your opponent's hoops; however, the bridge bonuses make such a strategy risky in the extreme. |
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#15
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Re: A different perspective on disrupting coopertition bridge balancing
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col·lu·sion/kəˈlo͞oZHən/If two companies get together and agree that they should work together cooperatively to reduce air pollution in their industry that is cooperation. If the same companies agree that they are going to artificially lower prices for two years until they drive competitors out of business so that they can then raise prices, that is collusion. |
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