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#16
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Well, think about the maneuverability you lose with an 84 inch robot. Bots who just tack that kind of height on become unbalanced, and they tend to tip. Plus, most full court shots come out fast, and unless the blocker is big and heavy, it causes damage.
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#17
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Not true at all. pool noodles are super light and if you put some kind of fiberglass rod inside the pool noodle it should be a very good defense against full court shooting.
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#18
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
I am just saying what I saw from Chestnut Hill. 4454, a rookie team, added a perfectly strong blocker, pool noodle over plywood, but it upset their CG
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#19
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Quote:
ROBOT height (as defined in relation to the ROBOT) must be restricted as follows during the MATCH: If in contact with the carpet in its AUTO ZONE and/or its PYRAMID, ≤ 84 in. Otherwise, ≤ 60 in. You cross the carpet at the edge of the pyramid (outside the auto zone) and it is a foul, a technical if you keep doing it. Not exactly a good strategy for an "on the fly" modification. You are trapped and can't load disks, not that you had been shooting any in the first place. Now, if you built a wallbot that could raise and lower it's wall from 84" to <60", that may work. Just don't leave the AUTO ZONE while you are extended. |
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#20
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
1806 was the most feared bot at the Kansas City Regional because of their versatility. They were hitting high percentage 3 point shots from full court, then if you blocked them, they would just run cycles at the pyramid, then climb for 20 and dump for 20 more. It had everyone in a panic trying to figure out how to defend it. I would be surprised if they didn't make it pretty far at Championships.
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#21
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
I would be very interested to see a very high profile/high arcing shooter such as 3604 paired with a very long robot such as 326 parked in front of them. This pair to me seems like it would be able to empty all feeder station discs with hopefully and ground pick up bot to clean up the early missed shots.
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#22
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
something the judges, at least at st louis, did not do well was the 84in rule for outside the auto zone. Wonder if that rule has been interpreted the same at other regionals.
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#23
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Quote:
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#24
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
How about this particular scenario:
An alliance elects to use 2 Full Court Shooters, one on each side of the field. The third alliance partner is playing defense or scoring via discs on the floor. If the opposing alliance decides to block both Full Court Shooters, would this result in a blockading/stopping the flow of the match penalty under G25? |
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#25
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Were they not calling violations for robots > 60" completely outside of the auto zone, or do you mean something else? I'm having trouble parsing your post.
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#26
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Quote:
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#27
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Quote:
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#28
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
They were calling them. I'm not sure what he means either.
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#29
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Easier said than done in some cases. Plus, in doing so, you would essentially be preventing the shooter bot from leaving its loading zone while also blocking the one on the other side of the field. This might be even more of a G25 penalty.
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#30
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Re: Full court shooting strategy
Quote:
One of our defensive strategies was to place a robot on each side of the pyramid to prevent the other alliance from feeding their full-court shooter. No G25 violations. I'd talk to the head-ref at each event to figure out what you can get away with, because it is up to interpretation. Last edited by John Sabath : 19-03-2013 at 22:28. |
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