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#1
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
Even if you accept the notion that the "scorced earth" draft is a negative thing, I feel it's clearly the lesser of two evils. While it certainly happens, it happens only a couple times per season. It's a rare occurance that may be unavoidable in particular situations unless you want teams to jump down their picklist to the first team who will accept them and leave everyone else on the table. It's definitely the better option than allowing declines, in my mind.
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#2
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
I like it as-is.
More matches will help sort out the rankings. Teams that employ this strategy only to break up other alliances run the risk of someone saying "yes" when they don't expect it, so if you start doing this, you should actually want to play with the team you are inviting. I don't like the idea of being able to decline and later say yes. If we go that way, allinaces could just be formed in the pits and you could go tell the scoring table who your partners are. I also think sometimes a team will decline not because they don't want to play with the #1 or #2 team, but because they can put together a more balanced and competetive alliance by having an earlier pick in Round 2 if the overall field is not deep. Some events having pick 8 & 9 or 7 & 10 is way better than pick 1 & 16. |
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#3
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
About the only way you could stop the Scorched Earth strategy is to not allow the top 8 team to pick any of the other top 8 teams
Now that would make some interesting alliances. |
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#4
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
But then you would have teams "fighting" for 9th place.
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#5
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
This is what the offseason event in Kansas City does. It makes for an interesting alliance selection in that teams pick based on knowing who they have to play. This year it might be neat with the cttd having two division finalists and another frc top 25 team competing.
Last edited by nicholsjj : 26-07-2013 at 12:55. |
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#6
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
There's no way to prevent this strategy while still preserving the right to decline.
That said, I haven't the slightest of problems with it. It makes eliminations far more interesting every single time it happens. It provides the top seeds with an important additional incentive that compensates for the disadvantage given to them by the serpentine draft. Perhaps the only thing that bothers me about it is that it's a little awkward. If you've seeded in the top 8, you should have the right to form your own alliance. Imagine if this wasn't the case. Imagine 6-7 FIRST teams openly lying to the first seed about the state of their robot to try and avoid getting picked. Imagine the off-field deals this would incentivise ("if you don't pick us, we won't pick team xxx that you want on the back half of the draft"). Even more teams would more actively hope to not be on an alliance with someone. I mean, I guess scorched earth should be avoided, in the sense that we shouldn't have a seeding system and number of qual matches that commonly allows carried teams to seed first / second / third. However, to at least some small extent this is unavoidable. Even in 2010 there were teams with better schedules than others (and, as good at ranking teams as it was, not a ton of people want to go back to 2010 for some reason). It's also worth noting that not all declines are because the chosen team thinks the top seed sucks or whatever. The serpentine allows for better alliances at lower seeds sometimes. In addition, almost every decline in Canada last year was done in order to play at a seed that faces #1 in the finals, in order to earn wild card slots. |
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#7
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
Even if you add more matches it will "help" but it won't solve the problem. That's if you would even call it a problem. Over the years we have been given more matches but even then there are still teams who slip into the top 8 who aren't the best and top teams who have rough matches.
Rankings is mainly determined by performance. I'll use our team as an example. Our team had the same record as team 2648 at the Pine Tree Regional (12-1) the difference came down to our autonomous points. Our team had two matches we missed all of our shots due to different reasons. One match we had an air tank pushing down on our plate causing all shots to go low. Another we had a driver station error that prevented us from selecting the proper speed before a match. In the one match we lost we had one partner who was struggling with shooter problems and another who lost all controls to their drivebase. In the end we would have selected 2648 if we seeded higher but the story holds true in that it didn't matter who had the better robot, it mattered in who could pull it off every match. 2648's autonomous and teleop game were dead on the entire weekend which gave them the number 1 spot. Similarly 125 also had one of the best robots at the event but seeded #20 after a tough match schedule. 1114 was one of the best in the Archimedes division last year but they finished 66th after some issues and were the second pick. If anything I wished we had less qualification matches. Friday we had 9 matches some with only a 4 match turnaround leaving no time to fix problems. Unless you have a panel of judges who strictly make the rankings based on robot performance, you will never go into alliance selections with teams ranked where they "should" be. I like the system the way it is. No 1-8, 1-8, no picking in the top 8, etc. |
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#8
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
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3928-1986 3928-1806 3928-3284 3284-1986 3284-1806 Or even the feared and well practiced combination of 1986-1806. That's not counting other high-scoring bots being in the mix like 1939, 3528, etc. But even so, throwing a match is harder than it sounds. If it's the last match of the day and you're paired up with someone who's decent at scoring and has a vested interest in making sure you don't fall outside the top 8 and are suddenly allowed to form a super-alliance, you more than likely aren't going to be able to throw it unless you're playing against the team you want to be with in the first place. |
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#9
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
I honestly love thinking about alliance selections.
"If they pick them, then they need to have a full-court blocker, so they'll pick XXXX, but they also have a ______ autonomous, and XXXX needs to counter that sooo..." And then: "But if that match goes that way instead, then XXXX will seed first, and XXXX will decline them, then they can pick 20 later in the draft!" Not that that scenario happened to us or anything. Nah. ![]() |
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#10
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
I actually think that a 1-8, 1-8 selection would help to discourage scorched earth. 1-8, 1-8 helps captains 1-3, has no effect on captains 4-5, and hurts captains 6-8 when compared against the serpentine draft.
In a serpentine draft, seeds 6-8 are hesitant to accept the invitation of a mediocre #1 seed because the remaining partner will be the 16th pick. (Using seed 7 as an example) If the 7 seed declines, they still get the 7th and 10th picks. In a 1-8, 1-8 draft however, if the 1 seed invites 7, 7 is much more likely to accept. 1's&7's second pick will be #9. If 7 declines, in contrast, they are stuck with the 7th and 15th pick. Assuming minimal difference between pick 7 and 9, 1 only needs to be marginally better than the 15th pick (could be as low as 23rd overall robot) for them to accept. Not to mention an easier schedule in eliminations. Since scorched earth strategies rarely (if ever) come from a seed lower than 3, this would definitely limit the occurrences of scorched earth. |
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#11
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
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Blowout city. Think about it. 1st seed gets 1st and 9th picks; 2nd gets #2 and #10 picks; 8th seed gets what's left at the #8 and #16 pick slots, which can get pretty thin at smaller events, particularly the #16 pick (and the third robot can make or break an alliance). When divisional QFs set the world high score, and it's not close even with each alliance having its own set of game pieces... Now, I don't know about you, but I don't necessarily like a blowout. I'd rather have both sides be able to get the win, just one plays a bit better and wins, like the Einstein semis/finals that year. With the serpentine, it's any alliance's game to win, at least in theory. With "straight", it's just a bit easier for the higher alliance to win. |
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#12
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
I think the people in this thread are generally on the right track: Nobody should be suprised when a team does what's in its best interest. In my mind, the most important condition for the alliance selection method is that teams are incentivized to perform well in the qualification rounds.
The current setup has worked pretty well, but there is at least one case I haven't seen mentioned yet where it would break down. With the recent games, getting to pick 1st and 16th has almost always been better than 2/15 which is better than 3/14 and so on down to picking 8th and 9th. That's true because the performance gap between the very best teams is higher than the performance gap between average teams. Assume for a minute that teams score a constant number of points per round and do nothing but offense. The top 5 teams might score 70, 60, 52, 46 and 40 pts while the 20th through 24th teams might score 20, 19, 18, 17, and 16 points. In that case, you can see that having the 2nd best robot on your alliance is worth 60-52=8 points per round more than having the 3rd best robot on your alliance. Meanwhile, the choosing last vs. next to last is worth only 17-16=1 point per round. Since where you pick in the first round makes a bigger impact than where you pick in the second round, you want to be a higher alliance captain despite the serpentine. However, if the top 16 teams had very similar scoring potential while there was a big drop off in performance between the 17th best robot and the 24th best then it would be better to have the 8th and 9th picks than to have the 1st and 16th because picks 1 and 8 are interchangable while pick 9 is much better than pick 16. I think having a game where this happens isn't outside the realm of possibility. I would have to look at some historical data to know for sure, but I have an inkling that there might have been more differentiation in the second round than the first in 2005. Edit: Though at a quick glance it appears this was not the case Last edited by SoftwareBug2.0 : 27-07-2013 at 03:26. |
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#13
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
If this is a problem - and I'm not sure it is - what about this solution? If any team is declined X times (X = 2, 3, whatever) they lose their pick until the end of the round. Now the earth they are scorching may be their own!
I've seen two instances: 1. A team wasn't really thrilled with playing with a top seed, but agreed to accept if the seed would first pick others in the top 8 who presumably would decline. This is the true scorched-earth scenario Frank presents. 2. A team ranked #1 based on the strength of its schedule in quals. Other teams thought the #1 alliance had no chance, and so they were declined multiple times. I don't recall for sure, but I think they finally picked someone outside the top 8 who had to accept or risk not playing at all. |
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#14
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
I think that the alliance selection process is perfect.
"Scorched-Earth" strategies are just as beautiful to me as making a dark-horse pick that truly pays off or creating a powerhouse alliance. We all play qualification matches to try and seed #1. The team that does deserves to pick their alliance however they see fit. Likewise, the teams below them have the same right. Watching that dynamic play out is fascinating and addicting. I think it's the greatest 20 minutes of every event. |
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#15
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Re: FRC Blogged - What Do You Think? The ‘Invite to Decline’ Strategy
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