Eligibility is the same as it was for the 2013 *FIRST *Championship, Wild Cards and all.
Note that with the growth of our program, the number of waitlist slots we will be able to offer teams is likely to be very small. We can’t predict the exact number, as it depends partially on the rate at which teams offered merit-based slots accept, but it would not surprise me if we could offer only 20 or fewer waitlisted teams slots at the *FIRST *Championship.
I’ll blog again soon.
Frank
Well, nothing’s changed. I have to say though, I was honestly quite afraid when I first saw the title of this post; I thought that the day had come where they had to adjust the Championship eligibility somehow. But, that time will come eventually. I do wish that the wildcard system was adjusted so that any prequalified teams, not just teams that qualified earlier in the season (winning, ei, ras, chairmans, or other wildcard), generated wildcards though. With all of the double-qualifying, I’d also expect more than 20 teams getting in off the waitlist…maybe 50. We’ll see though.
Well, this all but confirms that alliances will stay at 3 teams, based on the fact that “3” Winners will qualify from each event. But really, this is not much of a surprise at all.
the unquestionable 2014 FRC game as deciphered from this blog post
the number of waitlist slots we will be able to offer teams is likely to be very small. …] it would not surprise me if we could offer only 20 or fewer waitlisted teams slots
This clearly means, that the game is some kind of mail-theme. We have to pick up pallets with team members on them, and stick them into slots. The number of slots on the field is determined by the level of competition, with championships having the fewest number of available slots.
depends partially on the rate at which teams offered merit-based slots accept
Obviously, we have to put the team near a slot, and the team member has to decide if he wants the tiny, cramped chairman’s award slot, or the spacious “regional semi-finalist” one. your score directly depends on your ability to convince that team member that they do want to be crammed into the smaller slot.
I strongly hope that FIRST only takes enough wait list teams to make even divisions. The size of divisions made the number of matches at champs too low last year.
This isn’t a unique/exclusive correlation. Newton was a 100-team division in both 2012 and 2013, but we played 9 in 2012 and 8 in 2013. (2011 was 88 teams with 10 matches, though.)
I know. (Ahh, reffing 2013, how I won’t-particularly-miss-you.) That’s the point behind the number of teams not directly correlating to number of matches.* We won’t know what turnarounds to expect next year, so I argue it’s premature to talk about waitlist in this context. The GDC is in control of much of what influences average turnaround, and given Frank has acknowledged the match issue, we’ll hopefully see 2012-style timing and be able to view the waitlist in that context. (Read, hopefully we won’t all be groaning #ohnochampionshipmatches when the kickoff video talks about belaying robots off pyramids…)
*The other side of this coin in the total time available, which CD also discussed at length back then.
I’m really disappointed the wildcard rules didn’t change.
The wildcard system made a HUGE difference to the caliber of the teams attending Championship. Every region was represented at CMP by more of its top talent because of the wildcard rules.
I see no real reason (other than causing some slots to be wasted) to not extend the wildcard rule to generate wildcards ANY time a team who is already qualified for the 2014 Championship earns a slot in 2014. This includes 2013 FIRST Champions, HOF teams, Sustaining teams etc.
The net difference is a maximum of 27 slots.
Additionally, a team who has earned a slot by any means at a previous regional, who wins EI or RCA at their 2nd or 3rd regional does not generate a wildcard currently. They should.
Each event should qualify 6 teams that arent already qualified for CMP.
Additionally, the same should hold true for District model teams. If a team is already qualified by some other means (say, winning an out-of-district regional), then they should not eat up a district slot that could go to another team from the district.
The problem with adding 27 slots is that’s 27 “new” slots in a system that already has more slots “acquirable” than existing; there are already too many spots available.
And if I’m not mistaken, I believe in MAR (so it should follow through with FiM history) the last statement does hold true; the only example of this I could find/think of excluding team 341(who have a HoF spot, so it’s skipped anyway) was 2590 in 2012, who, along with having enough qualifying points, as well as previously winning the Montreal Regional, were skipped over in giving out point spots according to this document
If we followed the wild car rules you propose there would be a need for more that 400 teams. IIRC there were only about 20 spaces available for the wait list last season due to the current wild card system.
As we move to more districts the wild card system will go away. Every district will send the number of teams they are allotted. If a team can’t go the space is offered to the next highest ranked team until all slots are filled.
Since we have two more districts this season that means there will be fewer unused spaces and thus Frank’s prediction that there will be fewer than 20 wait list spaces this season. You can rest assured that people at FIRST headquarters ran through a number of scenarios when determining the wild card system to maximize the number of teams that go on to CMP based on merit, w/o running the risk of not having enough spaces for those teams.
The truth of the matter is that we DO need more than 400 teams at Championship.
I have proposed a solution that provides 4 divisions of 140 teams with 12 qualification matches each.
Each division running 2 fields, as the 2004 and 2006 Toronto Regionals were done, provides nearly double match throughput. It requires fewer volunteers than adding more divisions, avoids lengthening Einstein, as well as avoiding noise pollution issues associated with having 8 different divisions crammed too close together.
We’ve outgrown the old CMP model. Something drastic has to change in the next 2 seasons. It makes the most sense to make such a change in 2015 when the control system is already being revamped.
As the pressure to increase the # of teams at CMP keeps coming up, how about increasing the # of teams that make eliminations similar to offseason events such as IRI? Good teams can continue to play, other than the 8-10 matches in recent CMP events.
The format of just 24 making eliminations out of 100 or more teams, seems a bit too low.
2013 was the perfect example of why such a format would have been useful.
Teams were rushing to get reinspected after they attached a blocker against full-court shooters.
At IRI and TRR, we just selected a robot that could already do it.
I would guess that every team that attends CMP would want a greater chance at making eliminations.
Objectively speaking, what percentage of teams should be able to go to champs, in an ideal world (For example, The state of Rhode Island gets converted into one giant conference center with an attached indoor Olympic stadium that could hold over a dozen FRC fields)?
IMO, the answer isn’t 100%. If it was 100%, then why call it champs? There needs to be a selection process, and getting there needs to feel like an elite accomplishment. It isn’t 50%. I would even say that it isn’t 25%.
And if I’m not mistaken, I believe in MAR (so it should follow through with FiM history) the last statement does hold true; the only example of this I could find/think of excluding team 341(who have a HoF spot, so it’s skipped anyway) was 2590 in 2012, who, along with having enough qualifying points, as well as previously winning the Montreal Regional, were skipped over in giving out point spots according to this document[/quote]
Yes, this is true in MAR, and I’m pretty sure (not 100%) in FiM too. At least for MAR, some of their St. Louis slots are given to the top ranked teams (via ranking points accumulated over the whole season, see the Mid-Atlantic Robotics website for more details) in the region. In 2012, this sent 5 teams to Champs, and I believe it was increased to 6 in 2013 (along with there being another spot for EI too - lucky us )
In 2012, 2590 was skipped over in the MAR ranking slot distribution since they won Montreal, 365 was skipped over due to HoF, and I’m pretty sure 222 was skipped over since they were preregistered via waitlist for St. Louis. 25 was also skipped over since they won MAR Champs. However, 341, already prequalified for Champs due to HoF, also won the MAR Championships, and were first in points. While they were skipped over in the distribution of the MAR slots given to the top ranked teams, I believe this wasted away a slot given to a MAR Champs winner.
In 2013, 11 was skipped over in MAR ranking slots since they already qualified by winning Palmetto, 1676 was skipped over since they won EI at MAR Champs, and 103 was skipped over due to HoF. 2590, 2729, and 1640 were skipped over since they won MAR Champs.
15% looks good for now, but might be on the high side if FRC grows. My assumptions in this statement are that anything over 400 teams is unreasonable given the logistics demands, and anything under 300 is undesirable as well.
Trying to make a picklist for 24 teams is enough, the 32 team picklist takes forever. It only works at IRI because of the ridiculous talent depth. Even then, it began to be a struggle around team 28ish.
The talent depth in the divisions is not there. The upper back half of the draft already starts to see a massive drop in performance. I don’t want to have to pick (or be picked as) another barely functional robot. There are always exceptions and outliers (read, the successful alliances) but for the most part the third robots are low enough.