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Unread 02-08-2012, 16:10
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Originally Posted by JonathanZur1836 View Post
Regardless of what the technicalities are in the rules or rankings, I don't think that there should be a situation, in FRC or the Olympics, where losing actually gives you a better chance of winning in the end. To me, that defeats the purpose of sport and competition (not because winning is essential, but simply because of the idea of losing on purpose), especially in leagues like FRC or the Olympics, where the winners should win fair and square.

Take the NBA playoffs for instance, the way it works is that the top 8 teams from each conference move onto the playoffs; the 1st place team plays the 8th place team in the first round, the 2nd plays the 7th, and so on. At least from the point of view of statistics, the better your record, the higher your chance of winning. It is a simple system in which winning is always advantageous, and "throwing a game" always works against you in the end.
In your example of a single year's NBA playoffs, you are right to say that there's an incentive to be the top seed or generally a higher seed. However, when a team wants to win NBA Championships, they cannot think only about the short term. A team that's good enough to be the 7th or 8th seed in the playoffs, but will likely be bounced in the first round, is much better off throwing their games, not making the playoffs, and getting a high draft pick.

It simply is not easy to make a set of rules that both encourages improvement from the worst teams (for the sake of parity) and doesn't incentivise being bad.
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Unread 02-08-2012, 16:18
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

The only ruleset I can think of that minimizes the incentive of intentional losses is that of elimination tournaments (be them single- or double-elimination or what have you), with seeding determined by past performances. I will explain in terms of double-elimination.

Sure, you may throw a game to drop to the losers bracket but there is no guarantee that it will be significantly easier. The person you "lost" to might drop down to loser's the next round, and even if they don't, you'll have to face them (or someone "better" by virtue of beating them) in the grand finals.

I watch a lot of fighting-game tournaments, and they all run double-elimination. They don't have a governing body or system for consistent seeding (except for the biggest tournament of the year, EVO) and matches are never "thrown" except for RARE circumstances, usually involving external incentives as mentioned before. And that's a whole other can of worms.

EDIT: I do actually have another example.

In Magic: the Gathering (a trading card game) Pro level events, competitors are cut to the Top 8 for eliminations after a number of Swiss rounds. However, 1 does not play 8 and so on, the top 8 are randomly matched up.

This would not be appropriate for FIRST or the Olympics. The M:tG events have on the order of hundreds of participants, so the top 8 can be seen as very very closely matched to each other as the top 3-5%, whereas even a division at championships only has 100 teams max so far, pitting the top 25% in eliminations.

HOWEVER, it is worth noting that intentional draws and forfeits are completely legal in the ruleset of Magic. This situation is mainly meant to reference the randomization of elimination seeds for tournaments with a small percentage of participants in eliminations and how the number of participants both in seeding and elimination should be taken into account when designing a rule system.

Last edited by BigJ : 02-08-2012 at 16:26.
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Unread 02-08-2012, 16:33
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Originally Posted by Basel A View Post
A team that's good enough to be the 7th or 8th seed in the playoffs, but will likely be bounced in the first round, is much better off throwing their games, not making the playoffs, and getting a high draft pick.
This is something that gets discussed every year across the Big 4 leagues, but usually with the lowest teams (and most often in the NFL, where there is no lottery and draft picks can have immediate impact). It's not usually a problem, because the worst teams probably wouldn't win their last games if they tried, or it gets passed off as resting their better players.

There is a saying about professional sports playoffs--especially the NHL--"Just get in." Exhibit A: 2011-12 Los Angeles Kings. They made the playoffs as the 8th seed in the West on the last day of the season, then won the Stanley Cup.

Two more notes to remember: Playoffs mean more games, and therefore more revenue and more paychecks for the players, so they wouldn't want to give that up. Also, being first out vs. last in the playoffs (and then losing 1st round) moves you up in the draft from 17-24th pick (depending on the tiebreaker used to determine order among similarly eliminated teams) to 16th (and a <1% chance at winning the lottery).

*Note: using NBA/NHL league size and playoff structure
**Also: Only the NBA lottery winner takes the 1st pick automatically. The NHL winner can only advance 3 positions (so the bottom 4 can possibly pick 1st). The NFL and MLB do not hold lotteries.

TL;DR version: DON'T SKIP THE PLAYOFFS. You're not better off to give up the last week.

Sorry, I had to clarify the draft process relating to finishing position in the Big 4 leagues.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 12:19
Akash Rastogi Akash Rastogi is offline
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/olympic...-question.html

Here's another relevant article, based on what happened in last night's basketball game against Nigeria.

Plenty of folks in FRC used to claim teams were demolishing others by purposely getting high scores. Thought it would be fun to hear commentary about this one as well.

Notable parts :

Krzyzewski nodded toward Nigeria coach Ayodele Bakare and decided to speak for him too. "Coach would think it humiliating if we didn't play hard."

"On the one side, it's terrible to get whupped like that," Nigeria's Koko Archibong said. "But on the other side, it was something impressive to be a part of – impressive to witness in person."



What if you were pretty much demolished by a team in any given match? Would you be upset or would you find it inspirational? Do you think the losing team's reaction would be based more on the conduct of the winning team after the match is over? How would you react if you had to face off against a Dream Team?

Great discussion so far, keep it coming.

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Unread 03-08-2012, 12:43
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

I don't have any problem with a team scoring as much as possible while already leading, regardless of sport. Pertaining to basketball, I have two points:
  1. You never know when a lead is safe
  2. What else are you supposed to do, miss shots on purpose?

It's a competition. The goal is to do as well as you can.

I'm not sure about basketball, but for other Olympic sports at least, the first tiebreaker to determine group standings is point differential, so "running up the score" can actually help you.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 13:04
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

In addition, as long as you can avoid complacency, impressive wins can get into your future opponents' heads.

Question: Were there any matches where the "Don't score too much" rule in Lunacy actually affected the outcome by not having supercells available? I remember the general consensus being "Take them away if you want, we don't need them."
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Unread 03-08-2012, 13:50
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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You never know when a lead is safe
Usually I would agree with this, but this lead was definitely very safe. If team USA didn't score a single point in the second half, they still would have won by 6 points.

As far as running it up goes, most of the starters were pulled out, and it is important to remember that the reserve players are still representing our country and want to prove that they deserve to do so. Unfortunately for the other national teams, our reserve players are also very, very good.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 13:56
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Usually I would agree with this, but this lead was definitely very safe. If team USA didn't score a single point in the second half, they would have won by 6 points.
But if you ease up on defense too, you start giving the opponents confidence, and that can make them start playing better overall. Of course what I said was a stretch for that game, but also remember that hindsight is 20/20. It could have happened.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 13:27
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Originally Posted by Akash Rastogi View Post
[
What if you were pretty much demolished by a team in any given match? Would you be upset or would you find it inspirational? Do you think the losing team's reaction would be based more on the conduct of the winning team after the match is over? How would you react if you had to face off against a Dream Team?
This happens all the time at FIRST events. It's really the luck of the draw when it comes to seeding matches. At IRI we triple balanced and still lost by 50 points! Nobody on our alliance was the least bit upset about it.

You just won't last long at FIRST if you get upset by that kind of thing.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 14:06
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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[url]
Krzyzewski nodded toward Nigeria coach Ayodele Bakare and decided to speak for him too. "Coach would think it humiliating if we didn't play hard."
.
In FTC last year, there were a lot of matches where our drivers only picked up one basket, or they only lifted it high enough to win comfortably, not to blow out the other team. Should we have gone for two or three baskets at maximum height every time? There is the danger of the robot freezing due to a Samantha glitch or something bad happening if you try for two or three baskets and don't make it, versus just lifting one higher than anyone else earlier in the match, but generally we didn't think it was GP to blow out a weak team. Is deliberately underscoring an insult to our opponents?

The flip side hurt us - when we needed three baskets at maximum height, we hadn't practiced it enough and sometimes had trouble.
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Unread 03-08-2012, 14:13
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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In FTC last year, there were a lot of matches where our drivers only picked up one basket, or they only lifted it high enough to win comfortably, not to blow out the other team. Should we have gone for two or three baskets at maximum height every time? There is the danger of the robot freezing due to a Samantha glitch or something bad happening if you try for two or three baskets and don't make it, versus just lifting one higher than anyone else earlier in the match, but generally we didn't think it was GP to blow out a weak team. Is deliberately underscoring an insult to our opponents?

The flip side hurt us - when we needed three baskets at maximum height, we hadn't practiced it enough and sometimes had trouble.
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Unread 05-08-2012, 11:44
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

At our regional, there were 2-3 dominate teams. In at least 1 match one of the dominate teams instructed it team alliance not to co-op balance to give the other alliance the points. Was this good straegy or poor play ?
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Unread 05-08-2012, 12:47
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Originally Posted by SciBorg Dave View Post
At our regional, there were 2-3 dominate teams. In at least 1 match one of the dominate teams instructed it team alliance not to co-op balance to give the other alliance the points. Was this good straegy or poor play ?
I'm afraid I don't quite understand the strategy here? Was this to mean the dominate team did not want to balance so as to not give another team the co-op points, or was it that the dominant team was throwing the match? If the case is the former, then I do not see an issue with a team doing this because that is not playing without heart, rather, it is playing with the big picture weaved into your strategy.
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Unread 05-08-2012, 13:02
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Re: Throwing Matches at the Olympics

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Originally Posted by CalTran View Post
I'm afraid I don't quite understand the strategy here? Was this to mean the dominate team did not want to balance so as to not give another team the co-op points, or was it that the dominant team was throwing the match? If the case is the former, then I do not see an issue with a team doing this because that is not playing without heart, rather, it is playing with the big picture weaved into your strategy.
If I understand correctly, the instruction was given by the dominant team not to co-op so as not to give their opponents any co-op points. This was not a throwing the match situation.

As for whether it's good strategy or poor play, it's both. In terms of ranking, it's good strategy (unless your opponents beat you) as you get 2 RP, they get none. It's also poor strategy if other highly-ranked teams do co-op and get 4 RP. Your opponents get 0 instead of 2. Seems to be a reasonable strategy, but not one I'd intentionally practice personally.
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