Do you think this is legal, gp, or even doable? You have a crew in stands to let your team know when you are breaking g-14. Maybe just 3x part by waving flag or something. The reasoning behind this is at most of the comps i have been to there is one screen and if it is behind your team they wouldn’t have to turn around to see score and people in stands might be able to keep better track of score.
The only thing i have found is that your team cannot have any electronic devices to outside arena. T-22 or something like that.
I dont see how that would be a problem. I cant find it anywhere in the rules where it says you cant.
Some sort of manual signal from the stands would probably not be penalized, but it might not be entirely in the spirit of FIRST. The point is to have everything done by the robots/players in the game. While there is technically no rules against waving a flag or something, it’s not exactly the spirit of the competition.
Under this rule (in my opinion)…
<G37>
TEAM Members In ARENA – Each ALLIANCE shall have no more than the four designated members of each of the three participating TEAMS in the arena during a MATCH. Any ALLIANCE with additional personnel in the ARENA will be assigned a PENALTY, and the additional personnel must leave the area before the MATCH can proceed.
It is implied that there are no more than four designated team members and where there are located. Team members in the stands will yell and scream and try to direct but what you are suggesting might just raise the notice of the referees on this field under this rule. However, the GDC decides these questions through the Q&A, so I would suggest you ask to be sure.
How about equipping your folks on the field with a good, old-fashion, analog device known as a “mirror”? That should allow them to see at-a-glance the score if it is displayed nearby.
Use an adjustable stand to attach an unbreakable one to the operator controls.
Blake
Your Commander will undoubtedly be able to see the real-time scoring display on the screen (if there is one). He can also take a pretty good visual estimate.
I’m with Al. I know that in the past, this has been expressly disallowed. And, if I see signaling from the stands (and especially if it’s followed), someone will be having a little chat with the team in question.
<T23> (and <T22>)individually doesn’t ban anything of this nature. However, taken as a whole, you can see that it would ban this.
<T22> The only equipment that may be brought on to the field is the OPERATOR CONSOLE, reasonable decorative items, and special clothing and/or equipment required due to a disability. Other items,** particularly those intended to provide a competitive advantage for the TEAM, are prohibited.
<T23> Devices used solely for the purpose of planning or tracking strategy of game play are allowed inside the ALLIANCE BASE, if they meet ALL of the following conditions:
Do not connect or attach to the OPERATOR CONSOLE
Do not connect or attach to the FIELD or ARENA
Do not connect or attach to another ALLIANCE member
Do not communicate with anything or anyone outside of the ARENA**.
Do no include any form of wireless electronic communication (e.g. radios, walkie-talkies, cell phones, Bluetooth communications, WiFi, etc.)
Do not in any way affect the outcome of a MATCH, other than by allowing team members to plan or track strategy for the purposes of communication of that strategy to other alliance members.
This, along with <G37> would allow the refs to put a stop to any signaling.
Hmm, I heard a rumor that the person in the outpost might get bored towards the end of the match…
For games where seeing the score is relevant they have in the past put a TV screen by the alliance station that can’t see the big screen.
Absolutely. Remember the commander? He’s going to be watching the field with undivided attention for 2:15, after having been trained for the position. Many commanders have been coaching matches for years- they know what to look out for, they know where the penalties are going to get called, and they can make a pretty good estimate of how the score is going to turn out. Does it really make sense for them to detract their attention from the field to turn to look at their team in the stands, when they could just as easily make the call as to how the scores are looking? I don’t think this will give teams an added competitive advantage, so I don’t really see the point. (Plus, as I’ve argued in other threads, I don’t think that is going to be quite as huge or “penalizing” as you guys are predicting- there are other empty/supercells out there, and good teams are still going to rack up the points.) Then we add in the fact that it’s not GP or within the intent of the rules… and I really see no reason why a team would want to attempt this. Just don’t try it. Spend your efforts training your commander instead.
Erich, i have to disagree with your interpretation of rules. Those all seem to talk about the members on playing field. There was a q&a response to a not as specific question as mine. We wouldn’t do it but there doesn’t seem to be a rule against it.
The communication outside of the arena is quite specific–any communication goes only one way (inbound) and can’t have a reciever. It also provides a competitive advantage.
If I was reffing, and a team was obviously communicating outside of the arena (i.e., to the stands or the team cheering area), I would talk to the head ref. The audience CAN affect the game.
Twice in 2008 that I know of, the audience affected gameplay/match ending. At a regional, someone was generating IR interference, intentionally or not, until an announcement came that they were interfering and would be tracked down if they didn’t stop. And then there was the one red card at Championships, which was at least partially due to audience reaction.
If the audience is affecting gameplay, then you effectively have a) more people than allowed in the alliance station and b) they are in the wrong area. Both are penalties.
I think this is like the bumper rules–separately, they have one effect, but taken together, they have a very pronounced effect that is also very limiting.
I looked at the Q&A you referenced, and that refers you to <T22> and <T23>. Again, taken as a whole, you can’t. Taken individually, you can. I’d go with the “taken as a whole” approach. (This is like some cases last year where “That would be a violation of the spirit, but not necessarily the letter, of the rules.”)
Sorry, but this logic is going to miss the mark. If, as you state, someone were reffing and tried to pull this, I am pretty sure there would be a rather large crowd asking that that person be prevented from further officiating.
The definition of TEAM in Chapter 7 is clear - it is four people representing the larger FRC “team” (lower case). The rules in Chapter 7 affect the actions of the TEAM. They do not restrict the actions of the “team.” The area of the ARENA is explicitly bounded and defined in Chapter 6 and the official drawings. Rule limits the number of TEAM members and additional personnel in the ARENA. Trying to make the argument that there are more than four TEAM members inside that bounded area when they are communicating from the stands is specious upon inspection.
If you want to make an argument against communicating with the TEAM from the audience, then do it based on the Tournament Rules (specifically, Rule <T23> and Rule <T23>). There at least, there is some basis for forming a logic that can hold water.
-dave
(And as always, here is the reminder that official answers are obtained solely from the FIRST Q&A system. No other source will be acknowledged by the referees. They won’t even look at discussions or answers from unofficial sources such as this forum.)
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Wasn’t there a team during the Stack Attack year that got DQed at the Pitt regional because their team was in the stands using some sort of signaling system since it was hard to see over the middle of the field? I don’t know if it will be the same this year but I would assume it is the same.
I didn’t hear (literally or figuratively) any large crowd during or after the 2008 Championships when team XXXX was DQ’d at least partially due to audience cheering. Nonetheless, point taken. And I have done so–just like the bumper rules, there is a number of individual requirements that add up to a pretty substantial boundary on what you can and can’t do. And this has been asked in Q&A. The only response was to refer to the above-referenced rules (<T22> and <T23>). I’m not quite sure that that totally works, though. Sure, it takes care of virtually any outbound traffic, and any electronic communication either way. The question is simply, is inbound communication that isn’t both electronic and wireless legal? As written, it is. (Please note: “As written” is just that, under my interpretation. This is in no way official.)
I might have asked about communicating with the OUTPOST, but that’s in the ARENA. You just have to do it without physical contact or electronic wireless communication.
Several years ago there were specific rules that explicitly prohibited signaling to/from the audience via “semaphore, flags, etc.” Those rules are no longer included in the game rules because, quite simply, they were silly and unenforceable. It was impossible to tell the difference between “signaling” and legitimate cheering for your team (although some over-zealous “audience police” certainly tried - somewhat unsuccessfully). So I would not assume that the rules will be enforced that way any longer, because - as has been said many times before - rules from prior years do not apply to this year’s game.
-dave
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Are you sure about this? Perhaps we’re thinking of different incidents. If you’re thinking of SF2.2 on Galileo, Team 40 was given a red card for an intentional tip, they were not given a red card for their team’s reaction to the tip. This explanation came straight from the head ref on Galileo to the student representatives from Team 1114, 217 and 148. The rumour that the DQ was for crowd involvement somehow has spread so far that it has been commonly accepted as fact. Unless there’s more information that I’m missing, this is just not the case.
Oh, OK. That was the one I was thinking of. I’m not arguing the intentional tip part, just that the reaction didn’t help their chances of a lower-than-red card.