I’m trying to understand your position. Let me try to sum it up to make sure we agree with what you’re suggesting. Your position is:
In the very narrow instance of finals matches where neither team will move on, there should be a new rule written to mandate a replay if the winning alliance is given a yellow card. The thought process here is this card is meaningless otherwise as the alliance still wins and there’s no change later for this card to escalate. As most cards given at this stage of an event are for actions on the field rather than the safety cards, you believe in this very rare circumstance we can settle this with that change. You don’t want to leave it up to HR discretion because you believe leaving it open to judgement brings error into things. You’d prefer see that decision taken out of the HR’s hands and instead codified so that it’ll be applied evenly across all events.
Does that sound about right? If so, let me point out why I’d still disagree with pretty much every point there.
First, I’m generally a huge advocate for taking things out of the HR’s hands. I prefer being able to point to a rule and saying “this is how it has to be handled. There isn’t a decision here.” You’re right, this IS more consistent. However, this doesn’t match what you actually desire. You cannot cite Champs in 2016 and 2017 as reason to validate your point. In fact, they show your idea to be inherently flawed. In 2016, a foul was called without the option for a referee decision. As a result, those 5 points pushed the game to a tie. With the way the game was scored, this pushed a tiebreaker in one’s team favor. Referees had absolutely zero decisions in this process. You’re mistaken in every aspect to suggest they did. Do you think ANYONE was excited to be a part of that? In 2017, we see something similar. Penalties were called because they had to be. There was a large number of them. As a result, the outcome was fundamentally altered. In both of these cases, the problem was the result of a rule without the ability to apply common sense to the situation. If we remove the decision from the equation, it’s just as likely to result in bad things as good. You’ve pointed to instances that show this.
You also mentioned referees shouldn’t know the score when making decisions. In most cases, I’d agree. In fact, I’ve been in huddles where an aggravated FTA comes in and pushes us to hurry it up because the outcome was a 100pt difference and we were debating 5-25 points. Why? We simply didn’t know the result. We didn’t have time to watch. I’ve also worked events where a card should have been applied to alliances during elims. Why weren’t the cards? The team that would have been awarded the card was just eliminated. In one case, an alliance should have received a second yellow card escalating to a red in the final match. If refs are completely unaware of scores, this results in the final match ending on a red card. If refs take a quick check to the score before determining to give the card or not, the event ends on the score. In either situation, the same alliance wins. Don’t you think it makes for a better event for spectators and teams to see it end without the card? That’s impossible if there’s never a check at score. It’s difficult to be respectful to all of the effort teams put into this if you never use common sense while taking a quick look at the scores.
I also fundamentally disagree with the premise this should only be applied in finals. If the same foul is given in a tough semis match, it’ll send the other alliance home and the winning alliance into finals with the yellow card. Can they do this again? No. But, that doesn’t change the fact one alliance’s event was ended by this. If we believe this is wrong, we shouldn’t limit it to finals under the flawed idea the yellow card carrying on matters. It certainly wouldn’t to the team eliminated in quarters/semis. They’re still eliminated by something that’s not exactly within the spirit of FIRST and the winning alliance only receives a wrist slap. As you want to point out the majority of cards given out in elims are for in game actions rather than safety, it’s important to point out most matches in elims don’t receive cards. As the probability the team will receive another card is slim, the idea of a card carrying on isn’t something that’s more important than the other alliance going home.
This isn’t about trying to make you be shy about your opinion or make you want to be quiet. It’s about pointing out the idea isn’t very good and would require nearly a separate game manual to handle all of the possible situations that could arise in order to fix the rule. Yellow cards are a terrible basis for a required replay, especially if they’re only considered in 1 (maybe 2) matches at an entire event. The cases you’ve provided show this to be the wrong path to take. If the events you think are a good example of why we SHOULD use this plan are examples of where this would cause more problems than help, doesn’t that make it rather clear this is the wrong path of action?