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#1
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Re: Suggestion to improve the alliance choosing program
You guys are overlooking something. There's another reason it's beneficial to not have rookie teams on the same alliance. As rookies, we're learning about all aspects of FIRST. We learn the most from experienced teams. It seems to me the mentoring aspect FIRST promotes throughout the build phase, would be appropriate for the competition phase too. On an alliance with 1 rookie team, there are 2 experienced teams to offer help, guidance, strategy, etc. I don't see a down side to this.
While it's certainly possible for a rookie team to outperform many experienced teams, I think it's still in the best interest of the organization overall for rookie teams to get the benefit of what more experienced teams can teach them during that first year. The more experienced alliance partners a rookie team has, the more information it receives on how to be even better next year. |
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#2
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Re: Suggestion to improve the alliance choosing program
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Also, I can think of at least one veteran team off the top of my head that could use some on-field mentoring themselves. They aren't exactly in a position to give advice. You wouldn't know it to look at their number--and the number is what the algorithm uses. Personally, I'd rather see the return of the design books. |
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#3
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Re: Suggestion to improve the alliance choosing program
I am unsure as to how something like this would work for some of the younger regionals as well, I mean look at Minnesota this year. Over half of the field is rookie teams.
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#4
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Re: Suggestion to improve the alliance choosing program
Ok, let me explain it this way: If a rookie team were on 10 alliances with 20 different experienced teams, that's 20 sets of data. The rookie team can decide for itself which advice is useful and which is not, but the more times the same advice is given, the more likely it is to be valid. More information is better than less.
I also am well aware it's not about the competition and winning, which is exactly why I'm suggesting the rookie teams be paired with 2 experienced teams during the competition. If I were promoting a better winning strategy, I'd suggest teams be seeded by individual performance, but I personally don't care about that, except to the extent of keeping track of our individual performance so we know how our design and strategy worked. If the algorithm were changed to include the fewest pairings of rookie teams possible, and to balance the rookie distribution between the competing alliances, it wouldn't matter what percentage rookies were at the competition. It would only mean there wouldn't be alliances where experienced teams were competing against inexperienced. |
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#5
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Re: Suggestion to improve the alliance choosing program
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Take a look at the 2007 match lists, if you can find any. (The Blue Alliance probably has them.) You will see almost exactly that situation. The hard part will be keeping the other teams from facing each other more than once or twice. Last year's algorithm was the most hated in FRC history. So you want the "third tier" to be made up only of rookies and only one other tier. That can't be easy to do. If you think it is, then I invite you to come up with an algorithm and submit it to FIRST for their use. |
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