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#1
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What does it take to be considered and elite team?
I was thinking ,What does it take to be and elite team in first. I can think of a few. When I try to quantify why I think they are and elite team my logic seem to break down. is winning a regional make you a elite team? if so how many ,how about winning the nationals ? Lets say you are the 3 pick from the 4 seed and you happen win the nationals, is that third seed and elite team or just a good team at the right place at the right time? How about winning awards ? you could win a rookie award and not have a team the next year .
Any thoughts on what you considered a elite . Jim schaddelee Team 107 Holland Christain /Metal flow Corp. |
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#2
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
The simplest answer is, continued high-level performance. Winning Nationals once will get you lots of recognition, but to really be an "elite" team, you need to do well, year after year. The teams I would consider "elite" are the ones you can always count on to be playing in the finals, and always have a good shot at winning. Most have multiple regional wins, though not always a Championship to their credit.
Let's put it this way: if you had to pick an alliance partner before Kickoff, without any knowledge of the game, or your alliance's robot, who would you pick? Chances are, you'd want to pick a team with a good reputation for success, every year. Past performance doesn't always dictate future results, but there are some teams you just know will be extremely competitive, every season. Those are the teams that, in my mind, are deserving of "elite" status. |
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#3
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
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As for winning something for four years straight, I could see that--but let's not count out the new gals at the dance. For example, 1398's gone to six competitions, and has five awards to their credit. (That includes a Rookie All-Star and EI award at Palmetto, and a Judge's Award at the Championship this year). Even though they're only a second-year team, I'd consider them among the top teams in the state in the non-robot department. (And we've got some great teams in this state--see also 281, 342, and 343.) Last edited by Billfred : 16-06-2005 at 10:22. |
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#4
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
What is your definition of an elite team? I, personally, don't think elite teams exist. No team gets special treatment by FIRST over another. All play by the same rules, with the same KOP, but some may have more funding than others. However, I wouldn't consider a well-funded team an elitist team either, nor one that wins a lot of awards.
Are you talking about the teams who seem to stand out from the crowd? Well, there may be reasons for that happening: there may be experienced mentors on that specific team who has networked their way into FIRST's decision making process (but that's personal involvement, not exactly team involvement), members of the team may be more willing to help out other teams, and maybe that team is just more noticeable. Marketing has a lot to do with that. Maybe their T-shirts are just more bright and fun. Maybe they have students (who aren't on the drive team) who would cheer, help, dress up, walk around and sell their team, who are just more INTO it than other students may be. I know on some teams, the students who aren't on the drive team just sit quietly in the stands, fall asleep, or mope around outside the venue. This is not showing team support. Therefore, in summary, elitist teams do not exist because none are treated any differently. There are just some teams who happen to be good due to the involvement of a few key individuals. |
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#5
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
He didn't say elitist, he said elite. It's the same line of reasoning as an elite athlete. They don't get specifal treatment from their league, but they perform on a level higher than most other athletes.
You can't win something once and be elite. You need to make a strong showing of yourself at regionals year after year. If you can win something once, great. If you can win it the next 4 years in a row, then yeah, you're probably at the top of your game. |
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#6
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
With FIRST there are several ways to be considered elite. Well maybe not elite, but at least an exceptionally good team.
One of the first, and most difficult, ways is to win the national chairmans award and be in the hall of fame. Those teams are well known in FIRST, have good teams, and usually a decent robot. Other than that, it would be based on name recognition because of multiple, sometimes continous, successes. It's easier to achieve an elite status if your successes are unique or stands out (either through magnitude or way it was achieved). Winning or designing unique parts and solutions consistently will achieve elite status than consistency being in the finals with a mundane design. I like to compare it to being an elite business. For an example lets take a look at Google. So to become elite you should 1. Innovate, 2.Be User Friendly, 3. Make Yourself Marketable, and, of course, 4. Don't be Evil. Seems simple, doesn't it? |
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#7
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
There is a huge difference between 'elite' and 'elitist'. As Cory stated, Schaddelee was looking for 'elite'. I would assume the definition he was looking for was "The best or most skilled members of a group: the football team's elite", in this instance.
Of course there is no favoritism from FIRST. Everyone is given the same restrictions, the same kit of parts, the same rules. However, it's what you create from those restrictions that matters - given that your only other boundaries are your imagination (and sometimes physics gets in the way). Is there the potential for FIRST to breed elite teams? Of course, and FIRST is chock full of them. What qualifies a team as 'elite'? It's a matter of personal preference. Some look at Championship winners, while others look at the list of Chairman's Award winners. On these boards, there's several teams we look at as elites because of their consistency in producing a machine that is effective, well-designed, and built to sustain the game's challenges. Many of them have the advantage of a lower team number - more experience in the program. Some have the advantage of better funding, some have more engineers within the robotics field, and some have a great parent base to support them. However, the real big boys always have one thing - my answer to this question - they have consistency in innovation. Why is it that people flock to see WildStang's designs, and have made the ThunderChicken a household name? Since when did the Cheesy Poofs become more than just a South Park reference? Why is SPAM no longer only a nasty meat-like substance? What the heck is a TechnoKat? It's not because their mentors are big on ChiefDelphi. In a crowd of about a thousand teams, these team names stand out not only because they have great marketing and unique names, but because every year they take another new bot out of the crate that shows the time, energy, money, expertise, and imagination of their whole team. It stands out. Nobody in Atlanta says 'You've got to come watch match 46 with me, that bot really stinks!' - they say, 'Have you seen Pink this year? They are CRAZY!'. You get 'em talking, and you keep 'em talking. It's not just the kids, either. Engineers like peeking into the insides of other bots, to see what everyone else has got under the hood. They learn, and they see what works and what doesn't. They pass this enthusiasm for learning onto their students. The cycle continues. Are there elite teams in FIRST? Definitely. It's very hard to refute that. Even this 'high speed chess game with flashing lights' needs kings, queens, and bishops to keep the action going. As long as teams keep showing their consistency in innovation, FIRST will keep dazzling us all. Last edited by Amanda Morrison : 16-06-2005 at 12:46. |
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#8
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
The team needs a memorable name, not just the school name probably. Robot performance must be dominating at every event and from year to year. The robot and team shirts must have consistent color scheme from year to year. Lots of powder coating and anodizing on the robot certainly helps.
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#9
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
The qualities of an elite team are difficult to quantify. There are so many great teams and yet they are all so different from each other.
I guess in the end it is consistent performance and a pure spirit, that cannot be broken, which eventually makes a team elite. For my personal preference, I tend to admire teams that have faced difficult times. I get inspired by seeing a team work through its adversity and still remain a great TEAM!! Last edited by OZ_341 : 17-06-2005 at 00:28. |
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#10
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
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Being an elite team, in my mind, means that the team 1) has a good robot every year and 2) is more than willing to help any other team build a good robot/team or become an elite team. Number one has been filled by many robots without anodizing/powdercoating/painting the frame and/or everything else. (examples off the top of my head: 980 (one of SoCal's best), 111 (I don't think they do any anodizing, unless it's clear), 71, and probably countless others. Number two--well, if a team isn't doing this, then they are probably a rookie or have a robot that needs a lot of work. |
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#11
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
I was just saying that coloring makes the team more identifiable rather than blending in with all the other natural aluminum. Just look at The Cheesy Poofs 254 and Kingman 60. Do you think they would be so popular if they didn't have a beautiful color scheme consistent from year to year? Probably not as much. I'm sure it is at least somewhat of a contributing factor to their popularity.
As for 980, they have one of the biggest most visible banners in their pit that says "980 Thunderbots" Yellow on black, you can't miss it. |
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#12
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
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Your using Cheesy Poofs and Kingman. Throw 22 into the mix, because this year (at least early on), you needed the paint to tell the robots apart. Coloring simply makes the robot recognizable in a crowd. |
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#13
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
While all the criteria thrown out so far has been very true, I think the main way you become an "elite" team is by helping other teams and making a difference (thats how you win the chairman's award and get into the hall of fame now isn't it?).
Teams that just win all the time, at least in my opinion, don't sustain the same kind of respect as teams that utilize robotics as a way to help others and make a difference. Because lets face it, you can have a bad year and lose all that "street cred" you had built up, but if you are known as a team that is always there, not only at the competitions when the judges are marking on their little cards, but in the build season when its only you, and God is marking on his little cards . Thats when it really matters.I would rather have a team of 20 kids that wanted to have fun and make a difference, than an entire armada of engineers. 447 |
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#14
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
Well I agree with what everyone has said here. To me an elite status team has everything. A good mix of marketing,mentors,students,teachers and parents. This is what I recoginze in the 67's,233's and 254's they have all of these things. Consistancy is also a big factor elite teams continue to year in and year out win and produce great robots. It doesn't hurt to paint the robot bright pink either hehe
. No seriously though having the complete package of everything is what makes those teams elite. My two and half cents, Drew ![]() |
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#15
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Re: What does it take to be considered and elite team?
If you want to be a technically elite FIRST team hang around their pits and ask lots of questions. Study their methods. Visit their website. Look at what they designed in the past. See what makes them tick.
If you want to be a Chairman's elite team go visit the Hall of Fame at the Champinship and look around. Ask questions as well and study what they do as well. Visit their websites and see what they do to make the FIRST community stronger and see if your team is capable of doing things like that as well. |
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