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#1
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Re: Team Name
Pick something unique to the school or the area to give the team a local identity. The key here is UNIQUE. An example of not being unique: if your mascot at school is the hawks, and you name yourself the "RoboHawks" I will personally drive to your school, commandeer your TIMS account, and change the name.
Some teams like to go with something associated with their number (like High Rollers are 987). A good self check you can make is going to thebluealliance.com team page, then ctrl+f any name you are considering. If more than one team already uses it, avoid it. Ideally you want to become a well-known team, so have a unique name that people can associate with the quality of your team. Last edited by PayneTrain : 29-10-2012 at 19:12. |
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#2
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Re: Team Name
I agree, name picking should be a team decision. It's one of the first times you get to see how the team decision dynamic will work with your team.
When deciding our name for Spectrum I think it took us about 4 hours and it was the final name suggested. Some of the others on the list pangea, something something kittens, duct tape was involved in several of them. Lots of them were bad but we ended up with a brand we really like. We looked at this list to see if any other teams had similar names: https://my.usfirst.org/frc/scoring/i...?page=teamlist |
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#3
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Re: Team Name
On our team we have essentially 2 names. Our name that we use with sponsors is Hart District Robotics or Hart Robotics (though there is now a separate Hart High School team). However our name for the past decade has been Harburn Robotics and that's what we use when we are at competitions, logo, and team spirit stuff. We generally try to limit the use of Hartburn to being purely a nickname just because its much harder to seriously market to sponsors.
In my opinion the team name is the first part of the team's marketing/sales pitch to sponsors. When I say this though, it really is only the case for teams who are starting up. However in my experience sponsors will more likely sponsor a team that serves an entire community (in my case our community has around a dozen high schools) than just a single school team. In that sense if you can somehow associate your team name with your region, school district, city, or something of that source, it could go a long way towards getting sponsors to take you seriously from the first impression. In particular in places that have very few teams it gives the impression that you serve a larger area and thus larger population, which would make it easier for a sponsor to justify funding the team with larger sums of money. This is just my 2 cents about naming teams. |
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#4
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Re: Team Name
This obviously isn't the FIRST priority in picking a name, but be sure your name can be shortened to something that can be said quickly in a match. In strategy huddles, while coaching, and some other scenarios, it's really handy to be able to say "chickens", "simbots", "aces", or "OP" than to have to say "terminal velocity". It turns out, "Shaker Robotics" is way easier to shorten.
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#5
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Re: Team Name
Some completely unhelpful thoughts on reading this thread:
1) Leeeerooooy Jenkins? 2) JEWS is a great idea, but you're right, somebody out there will have trouble with it. (I'm Jewish, I think it's hilarious myself. The uniform/costume possibilities alone are almost worth it!) 3) I have a new partner coming in January, who is a Brain Surgeon and did research with NASA before entering medicine. I can't wait to introduce her to the team as a rocket surgeon! 4) Silly names can work fine, so long as you back it up with a pragmatic, successful attitude. Think Thunder Chickens, Pink Team, Space Cookies, and a hundred others. |
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#6
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Re: Team Name
IF you go here: http://www.facebook.com/explodingbac...32826956843621
You can see our workshop on Image and Marketing. It might help you weed out and come up with some good names. Good Luck! |
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#7
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Re: Team Name
My first thought too, but Leeroy doesn't have the best reputation [context] [explicit language] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkCNJRfSZBU&t=01m22s Last edited by F22Rapture : 29-10-2012 at 19:19. |
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#8
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Re: Team Name
Quote:
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#9
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Re: Team Name
go with J.E.W.S! its the funnest team name I have seen yet!
and if anything at least you'll get laughs out of it |
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#10
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Re: Team Name
Quote:
If you *think* that a name and/or acronym may be offensive to someone, or some group, then there are at least two ways to go about resolving the issue. You can put the name out of consideration, as some have suggested... OR, and this is a little riskier, you can approach representatives of that particular group (or approach that particular person) and say something to the effect of, "We were thinking of calling our robot team _____. However, we realize that you may not approve of this, and so we would like to ask for your permission to do so." Naturally, if the group refused permission, then you would find another name. On the other hand, if they granted permission (or possibly even if they refuse), then you may have a new community partnership. If nothing else, they will most likely be pleased that you asked. This is something that the NCAA had a number of colleges do--as I understand it, any college that used a Native American name for their athletic teams had to get permission from the tribe to use the name, or change their name. Some tribes granted permission, others did not. |
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#11
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Re: Team Name
There's plenty of us right here in the US, and I really don't find it offensive. But I don't speak for anyone but myself.
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#12
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Re: Team Name
Look to your sponsors for inspiration as well. Many older teams still use names that came from the partnership with their main founding sponsor (X-Cats, Delphi ELITE).
Our name came from integration of our two founding sponsors: Northeastern University (N.U.) + Textron Systems (Tron) = NUTRONs. -Brando |
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#13
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Re: Team Name
Another idea is to name it after a past robot. Our name (PVC Pirates) came from our 2004 robot, which looked like a tallship and was made out of PVC. We've used PVC on every robot ever since. Also, I think the JEWS idea is hilarious. There are far more suggestive acronyms for FRC teams- for example, Team 1687 uses DTF on their shirts (their team name is Doherty Technical Forces).
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#14
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Re: Team Name
Theodore Roosevelt's Disco Haircut - FRC4008
https://my.usfirst.org/myarea/index....ils&tpid=86879 I dare you to get weirder than that! |
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#15
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Re: Team Name
A long time ago when I was with 258 out of San Jose, after the first year the team decided they wanted to be separate from the schools mascot (lion) in terms of a nickname. There was a feeling that we were not getting support for our efforts and the team wanted to "go rogue" in their team name.
Pirate names flew during an hour long discussion. We settled on Sea Dawgs, to indicate we were pirate from the school. I say all this to agree with everyone who stated that the team needs to pick their own nickname. |
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