Yeah...why regional tournaments in this state don’t coordinate with each other + the state schedule (also why the state schedule never coordinates with the nats schedule) is beyond me...I guess each one wants to be special, even if they don’t realize it can hurt teams since many teams prepare on a tournament-by-tournament basis (like “OK, let’s get past this tournament and then worry about the next, not look ahead to plan ahead in the case we make it”).Cornstalk wrote: ↑February 26th, 2020, 11:15 amThis is why I don't think regionals are an accurate representation of a team's strength. So i don't think it would help much to look at Butler results for state predictions.boomifailure wrote: ↑February 26th, 2020, 6:24 amAh, ok that makes some sense.Creationist127 wrote: ↑February 26th, 2020, 6:08 am
Two things for that. First, I'd think a lot of teams have people with certain 'specialties'--a couple events they are really good at. If at a certain competition, these two or three (or more?) events conflict with each other, they have to sacrifice some events for others. Second, I would imagine that teams would tend to base their rosters off of their state's schedule, as well as the nats schedule. Like, they wouldn't assign someone to Chem Lab, Circuit Lab, and Water Quality if those events conflict at States. So their team would probably be 'optimized' when following that schedule. If the schedule for a competition is pretty similar to the state schedule, their team would probably perform better than if the schedule was significantly different.
Of course, this is just my two cents--feel free to differ (or yell at me if I'm totally off base ).
P.S.: HAPPY 400TH POST
Inherently, allegedly the reason why the state schedule is not lined up with the nats schedule is bc the state board likes to put out a state schedule abnormally early and not even wait for the rules release to make the schedule. I personally think that the mess that is tournament scheduling in this state doesn’t make sense, but not all the ppl who run operations in this state make sensible decisions anyways, nor are they necessarily that receptive to criticism.
Disclaimer: These are my personal thoughts and do not reflect the opinions of the staff of scioly.org.