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#1
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I have an off question for this main topic. Our student field coach was put in a very hard situation during one of our competitions. What would have been the correct and best way to respond and react? It was a 3 robot full allience, all three teams had a driver, a shooter, and a field coach. Our field coach was a student while the other two field coaches were adults. Our field coach reached out to the other two (adult) coaches before the match and made a strategy. But, once the match started the (adult) coaches saw ways to make their own team look better (by ball hogging ect.) and took those ways instead of following to the plan. As the student field coach how would you react to an adult field coach not listening to you during a match. Obviously yelling at him wouldn't be a correct response but to sit there and let your alliance loose because of another adult intervening too much? Most of the topics that have surfaced have been about students doing this but to talk to person similar to your age versus someone alot older to you is different am I right? What would you do?
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#2
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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The next item would be to talk it over with my mentor. If this is a repeating pattern, having my mentor just kind of hanging around behind the drivers during strategy discussions can kind of head that off--and later, if they are blowing off the strategy, said mentor can kind of walk over to that coach and mention, mentor to mentor, that their actions are showing a lack of respect for other teams on their alliance, particularly for student coaches. A particularly wise mentor can then lead that discussion into any place it actually needs to go, if needed. Incidentally, my team uses the "extra mentor in the area" strategy for strategy meetings, regardless of who the coach is. It's more of a precaution than anything else--if there's something funny going on, the mentor can step in, but usually doesn't need to. During the match, there is no real remedy. You can ask if there's a reason for the change--say, a broken robot that can't eject the ball--but there's really nothing you can do--same if the situation is going the other way. |
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#3
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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A strategy is only as good as the scenario it's designed for, when that scenario changes, so must the strategy. Last edited by Deke : 17-11-2014 at 22:29. |
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#4
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
I've loved this video since I first saw it, and I think the coach here does a pretty great job on the field.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jd32B0chAg |
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#5
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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The success of a Drive Coach depends almost entirely on the strategy that is developed amongst the alliance prior to the match. Without that strategy, a Drive Coach is nearly powerless to have a meaningful effect on the match. Once your team develops a solid system for ensuring the best strategy for all 3 teams is created, agreed upon, and thoroughly understood by all before every match, the role of the Drive Coach becomes quite straight-forward: Understand everything about the strategy pertinent to your team, and do everything humanly and robotically possible to execute that strategy as faithfully as possible. If any deviation from the strategy happens, the Drive Coach needs to inform the other 2 alliance member Drive Coaches clearly, loudly, and immediately on the field during the match - no exceptions! Deviations to the original strategy happen often (although the better the team, the less often it happens - this more than anything else is the mark of a "good" team - I don't care if your robot itself is average, good or great, I care far more whether your team can consistently execute an agreed upon strategy). Nothing tarnishes your team's reputation more than deviating from a strategy and not immediately informing your alliance partners why. Your Drive Coach is the singular person responsible for making sure that never happens... no one else. If you watch the video, our alliance consists of 368, 340 and 610. Prior to the match, we agreed on a strategy where 610 would inbound, and we would play a "ground-game" where we would kiss pass to 340 immediately upon inbounding, then 340 would advance into the next zone (or farther) and kiss pass to 368. 368 would then move to shoot in the high goal, and 340 would support them by setting picks to clear space in the offensive zone. 610 would drop back and play defense, and be ready to receive the next inbound pass immediately. It was a simple strategy, especially for 610, but you can still hear the amount of instructions Jake is providing for such a simple strategy. Details are very important. Managing which side to inbound, ensuring the robot is in position BEFORE the inbounder delivers the ball. Instructing which robots to play defense on. Reacting on what to do next based on where in the cycle you and your opponents are. Did your alliance partners miss a shot? Should you play defense a little bit longer? Or cut and run back to receive an inbound? Do you need to hit an opponent to free up an alliance partner who has been hemmed in, thus delaying the cycle? 610 spends a lot of time simulating and working through different match situations between competitions. Jake would've done hours of strategic work-ups on mock matches. Prior to a competition, we select 5 random teams who will be competing at a regional with us, and we will construct what we feel is the "optimal" strategy for our alliance, taking into account the strengths and weaknesses of the opposing alliance. We will keep generating random sets of 5 teams until we feel we have a good overall understanding of what the different "types" of matches will be at the competition. Usually, only about 3-4 general match strategy "types" emerge. Jake would've basically memorized all of them, and could specifically recite second-by-second what 610's best role (and others) would've been in each of those situations. It is a bit extreme, but we are very demanding of our Drive Coach, Strategy and Scouting Sub-Teams in this regard. The members of 610 will be the first to tell you that we don't necessarily build the best robots out there. Our machines are usually reliable, and do the simple things relatively well, but rarely do we produce a real "gamebreaker" machine that performs spectacularly well. We rely heavily on good scouting, strategy and drive team execution to squeeze out as many wins as possible, and it works! Good luck and best wishes in your new role as Drive Coach! It is truly one of the most fulfilling roles on any FRC team. You can potentially make a very large impact on the team's on-field success! |
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#6
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
How do you know that this was the case?
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#7
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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If I were you, I'd bring your student drive coach and one adult mentor and go talk to the other adult drive coaches following the match. Be civil, but if you feel the agreed strategy wasn't followed then get an explanation on why it wasn't. There could be a number of reasons that the alliance strategy had to change mid-match. But at the very least you'll have an opportunity to voice your opinion and get an explanation that could turn into a learning opportunity - on multiple accounts. Learn from your previous match, get feedback from your alliance partners if possible - and move on. Not every match will be positive, but you can't let those matches get your coach or your drive team down. Being a drive coach means having thick skin, adapting quickly and being willing to do what it takes to win. This is the FIRST Robotics Competition and you'll find many take this competition very seriously. But you know, have fun with it too. And as to the original thread topic - Project! Better to have yelled and lost than to have never yelled at all. Communication is key and it's not always pretty during the intense time limitations of an FRC match. Sometimes I will preface our alliance partners that I will probably be yelling, but it's never in angst - it's just to clearly communicate. I always find that shaking hands post-match and talking on the way back to the pits helps emphasize this too. Usually I'll even yell out time reminders for the alliance - a reminder that we're coming up on 30 seconds never hurts. Last edited by Ryan Dognaux : 17-11-2014 at 23:49. |
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#8
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
The real key to drive team coaching is to tie your jacket around your waist. Got a couple championship rings that way.
![]() Last edited by TravusCubington : 18-11-2014 at 00:03. |
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#9
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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#10
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
You can read what Adam Freeman had to say over on being a drive coach over on beyondinspection.
If anyone else would like to do a coaches corner, please send me a message. |
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#11
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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For the amount of thought many talented veteran coaches put into the role, its no surprise that their respective programs reflect the same enthusiasm and success both on and off the field. |
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#12
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Never be angry.
Of course, this is a bit idealized - who has perfect control of their emotions? - but there is nothing I've seen demoralize students more at a competition than a furious drive coach shouting them down. That is a terrible sight, and is far more common than it ought to be. There is a major difference between being loud and assertive (which is necessary in a competition environment) and being intimidating and rude. It's difficult to keep your cool under stress, but it's absolutely necessary. |
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#13
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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if this happens you don't wast time and you just go and do what would be best for your alliance at that time. |
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#14
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Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
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I agree - have an adult mentor go with the student to clear the air. No need to have needless animosity toward a team if they saw an alternate strategy that they couldn't articulate at the moment. Or conversely, if the teams in question really aren't good partners at that event, that would be good to know. |
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#15
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Thanks so much all! What I concluded from the posts before is that an adult mentor would help alot durring the pregame time. Durring the game a student will have to do their best at projecting in a stern voice to the coach speaking to him. And lastly, reach out to other teams after a match to see why they did the things they did! Thanks so much and I hope to see you at kickoff!
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