Friday, April 12, 2013

FIRST District System

I've noticed on Chief Delphi recently that a lot of people have been posting FiM style rankings for their respective regions and it got me thinking (not always a good thing) what would FRC look like if all of the United States went to districts.

But, first a little background on the District System for those that don't know or have been living under a rock since 2009. The district system was created in the summer of 2008 in Michigan as a way to decrease cost and increase the value and sustainability of the FIRST Robotics Competition. It was piloted in 2009 in Michigan and has been used every since. The difference between the standard regional model and the district system is that rather than pay $5000 for one Regional event you get to play at two District event. District events are around the size of a small Regional, normally 40 teams, and takes place on Friday and Saturday only. The absences of practice day and team access to the robot is something for another post. In 2011 Eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware formed the Mid-Atlantic Region. More info about the district system can be found here.

My District system would allow every team two districts event for the initial registration price. Since everyone will be on districts, team can go and play anywhere. They will be required to have one event in their home region but the second and so on can be where they want. Teams that go to more than two districts will pay the third district fee from the region where the third district is and have the option before Kickoff to pick which two district they want to count for point and which one will just be for practice. If they don't pick their first two district event will be point events.

Before I lay out what states are in each Region a little note about Championship spots for each Region. The number of spots are based off of a 600 team, 8 division Championship that I wrote about last year. They would be divided up as shown below:

Championship Berths
600 Total
20 for Hall of Fame Team
3 for Previous year's Winners
1 for Previous year's EI
1 for Previous year's RAS
30 for 5 Canadian Regionals
6 for Israeli Regional
6 for Australian Regional
6 for Mexican Regional
7 for International Team spots
520 for USA Regions

I know this will be controversial but I have limited spots for Hall of Fame teams to 20. That means that after you win Championship Chairman's you would get a 20 year exemption to Championship starting the next year. Teams that won more than 20 years ago would still be in the Hall of Fame, they would be just to qualify the old fashion way.
The seven spots for International teams are open to teams who do not have a regional in their country. They can either go to another foreign regional or come and play in the US. If they do the latter they will get two districts like everyone else, but will not be obligated to play at a region championship. Rather they will be ranked along with all of the other International teams and the top 7 will earn berth at Champs.

And now onto the district split:


FRC Districts
Name of Region
States
Number of Teams
Number of District Event
World Championship Berths
New England FIRST
CT, MA, VT, ME, NH, RI, Eastern NY
164
9
37
FIRST New York
Southern NY
99
5
22
Mid-Atlantic Region
DE, NJ, Eastern PA
109
6
24
FIRST Capital Region
MD, DC, VA
123
7
28
Carolina FIRST
SC, NC
78
4
17
FIRST South
GA, Eastern TN, AL, FL Panhandle
91
5
20
Florida FIRST
FL Peninsula
72
4
16
Ohio Valley Region
OH, Western PA, Western NY, WV, KY
143
8
32
Midwest Region
IL, IN, WI
147
8
33
FIRST in Michigan
MI
211
11
47
FIRST in Minnesota
MN, SD, ND
187
10
42
Mississippi River Region
LA, MS, Western TN, AR
72
4
16
Gateway Region
MO, KS, OK, IA, NE
135
7
30
Texas FIRST
TX
142
8
32
FIRST Northwest
WA, OR, ID, AK, MT
179
9
40
Rocky Mountain FIRST
UT, CO, WY
64
4
14
FIRST Southwest
NV, AZ, NM
61
4
14
NOCAL FIRST
Northern CA
105
9
24
SOCAL FIRST
Southern CA, HI
141
8
32

A couple of notes on the setup:
  • New York gets split between New England, Ohio Valley, and New York City. NYC could join MAR and double the size of that region.
  • The Dakotas got added to Minnesota because there are only like 5 teams between the two states.
  • Rocky Mountain and the Southwest could easily be combined, but I left then separate because a combined region may be too large.
  • Hawaii goes with SOCAL because it doesn't have enough teams for its own region. They would probably have a district event or two on Hawaii and then teams would go to California for Champs.
  • 3 regions, FiM, FiMn, and NW all qualify over 40 teams for Championships which means that teams could qualify that don't make elims at the Region Championship. A way to fix this would be to have two simultaneous Region Championships like NE wants to do. This could all fix the UP problem in Michigan if one of the events was farther north.
That's about it, I'm not saying I'm right but here's my idea. Tell me what you think.


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