Oliver Ellsworth wrote:MODS: Can we move this to a better place? Gracias.
FredMorlan wrote:Oliver Ellsworth wrote:MODS: Can we move this to a better place? Gracias.
FYI, you can report your own post and keep threads a post shorter. Electron conservation!
Robert Volgman wrote:Things
Oliver Ellsworth wrote:Yeah, sorry Fred. But if you had PM'd me, this thread would have been another post shorter.
Oliver Ellsworth wrote:And Robert, I'm really sorry you weren't invited (or were you?). I'll make sure the players have more involvement in getting the field together, as coaches often forget people. This bigger issue was actually staffing, since a lot of people who would moderate are going to be at Pennbowl. This forced us to cap our field. I hate that we keep having to have smaller fields...
jonah wrote:We are going into a Stevenson-Auburn A final, with Auburn A having the advantage. Third was St. Ignatius; fourth, Loyola A; fifth, Carbondale.
Coach G wrote:Auburn B was sixth.
Jonas has a file of the stats, and will be putting them up fairly soon.
Thanks to all of the teams who came to play, to our moderators (Riley, Laudermith, Stankevitz, Laird, Greenthal, Houlding, and Weber) who kept things moving along on schedule, to our stats people (J. Wasserstrass and A. Salberg), and to the parents, frosh-soph players, and NHS members who helped.
Team records for the day for those in the championship bracket are: Auburn A 11-0, Stevenson 9-2 (both losses to Auburn), St. Ignatius 8-2 (lost to Aubun and Stevenson), Loyola A 7-3, Carbondale 6-4, and Auburn B 5-5.
ATT players (in order) were Andrew Deveau, Kevin Mallis, Lloyd Sy, Ben Chametsky, Quinn Rosenthal, Steve Server, Nolan WInkler, Marcel Youkhna, and Isa Domin. Zach Blumenfeld and Zahed Haseeb were the next two - honorable mention, if we were to give that recognition.
Extinction threshold wrote:Coach G wrote:Auburn B was sixth.
Jonas has a file of the stats, and will be putting them up fairly soon.
Thanks to all of the teams who came to play, to our moderators (Riley, Laudermith, Stankevitz, Laird, Greenthal, Houlding, and Weber) who kept things moving along on schedule, to our stats people (J. Wasserstrass and A. Salberg), and to the parents, frosh-soph players, and NHS members who helped.
Team records for the day for those in the championship bracket are: Auburn A 11-0, Stevenson 9-2 (both losses to Auburn), St. Ignatius 8-2 (lost to Aubun and Stevenson), Loyola A 7-3, Carbondale 6-4, and Auburn B 5-5.
ATT players (in order) were Andrew Deveau, Kevin Mallis, Lloyd Sy, Ben Chametsky, Quinn Rosenthal, Steve Server, Nolan WInkler, Marcel Youkhna, and Isa Domin. Zach Blumenfeld and Zahed Haseeb were the next two - honorable mention, if we were to give that recognition.
Fixed.
Chametz wrote:Thank you to Coach Greene and everyone else who made this tournament so successful. Also of course congratulations to Auburn A, who were, as always, very impressive. We had a lot of fun, though I lament the fact I didn't get to the book bin fast enough to get a copy of Raptor Red.
jonah wrote:Stats
Sedma wrote:E: you are a sneaky one Mr. Chrzanowski!
But yeah, that's a really fine performance by some Illinois teams. Good job everyone.
Oliver Ellsworth wrote:Is there any reason why Round 2 bonuses seem to be harder than the rest? By a cursory look at top teams, it seems to be an outlier, judging strictly on PPB.
Extinction threshold wrote:This set was far from excellent, in many ways and a lot of the bonuses were free 20-30 pts, hence the really high PPBs. Granted, there were also some hard difficulty outliers, but they were far outweighed by the really easy ones. I'm sure we will have lots of criticism sent to HSAPQ on ways to fix this set soon.
Cantaloupe (disambiguation) wrote:Extinction threshold wrote:This set was far from excellent, in many ways and a lot of the bonuses were free 20-30 pts, hence the really high PPBs. Granted, there were also some hard difficulty outliers, but they were far outweighed by the really easy ones. I'm sure we will have lots of criticism sent to HSAPQ on ways to fix this set soon.
Having looked over the set for its use at our tournament, I can say that I disagree. There were a few recurring problems (vague clues, lack of proofreading, etc.), but none of these were crippling issues; those issues that I found, I pointed out to one of the editors, who should be doing one last round of editing before ZIGZAG. I suspect that the set's poor reception is due to two factors, both of which, IMO, are actually good things:
1. This set is groundbreaking for high school quizbowl. In a number of creative ways, it strives to give meaningful matches to top teams without screwing over the bottom teams. Naturally, it's a bit jarring to hear some of the different writing styles employed in making this set; however, I'm convinced that this set helps set a good course for the future of high school quizbowl.
2. The classic "I know it, so it's easy" fallacy. From what I've seen, almost all bonuses have a clear easy/middle/hard structure. HSAPQ has just chosen to increase conversion by making the bonuses generally easier. If that means that generally competent teams get a lot of 20's and 30's, so be it. However, there are 8 teams at 15 ppb or below: I doubt there were that many "free 20's or 30's."
Oliver Ellsworth wrote:I concur with Matt on this. I'd say there were as many hard middle parts as there were easy middle parts, and yes, perhaps overall bonus conversion was higher, but I would contend that this is a result of easy- and medium- difficulty bonuses. That is, middle and lower teams' conversion is increased, while the PPB stats for top teams remains pretty accurate, as their PPB ultimately becomes a question of how many hard parts they can answer. This follows the same premise as tossups: pretty much every team can answer a question at the end, while many (and almost all of the good teams) can answer them by middle clues, and only the best knowledge will get you the question within the early clues.
Carangoides ciliarius wrote:Oliver Ellsworth wrote:I concur with Matt on this. I'd say there were as many hard middle parts as there were easy middle parts, and yes, perhaps overall bonus conversion was higher, but I would contend that this is a result of easy- and medium- difficulty bonuses. That is, middle and lower teams' conversion is increased, while the PPB stats for top teams remains pretty accurate, as their PPB ultimately becomes a question of how many hard parts they can answer. This follows the same premise as tossups: pretty much every team can answer a question at the end, while many (and almost all of the good teams) can answer them by middle clues, and only the best knowledge will get you the question within the early clues.
Well that's what a good quizbowl packet is supposed to do! If this is actually true and actually written in this correct way, this might be one of the best written sets there's ever been.
Oliver Ellsworth wrote:We are by no means starved; we're surrounded by famine. No, a hunger strike...
Coach G wrote:Re Matt's comment that 8 teams had 15 or lower pts. per bonus, perhaps he misread something in the stats. Of the 14 teams playing, 8 had 18+, four had below 15, and two were between 15 and 16 (15.90 and 15.75), for a total of 10 above 15 and 4 below. It is worth noting that two of the teams under 15 are from a school that just started a quiz bowl team this year, and this was only their second varsity tournament. Also, one of the two teams that got between 15 and 16 has just started to go to tourneys with pyramid-style questions; this may been that team's first Saturday invitational playing on good questions in that style. I am happy to see these teams seeking out good quizbowl and am sure that, with more experience, they will do much better.
Carangoides ciliarius wrote:This is all awesome, and once again reinforces my belief that no regular difficult tournament can be "too easy" as long as the questions are written well. I'm really looking forward to this.
adeveau wrote:Carangoides ciliarius wrote:This is all awesome, and once again reinforces my belief that no regular difficult tournament can be "too easy" as long as the questions are written well. I'm really looking forward to this.
I have to disagree with this. In this set, easiness translated into a lot of guessable answer lines, ones where an aggressive player would be like, "Eh. It's probably ___," buzz, and get points not for knowledge as much as for aggression. I powered at least one TU like this, and it was grossly unfair.
Crazy Andy Watkins wrote:adeveau wrote:Carangoides ciliarius wrote:This is all awesome, and once again reinforces my belief that no regular difficult tournament can be "too easy" as long as the questions are written well. I'm really looking forward to this.
I have to disagree with this. In this set, easiness translated into a lot of guessable answer lines, ones where an aggressive player would be like, "Eh. It's probably ___," buzz, and get points not for knowledge as much as for aggression. I powered at least one TU like this, and it was grossly unfair.
Guessable answer lines: not usually so guessable for 90% of HSAPQ's target audience. Given that where you might end up resulted in as much conversation in the Illinois thread as Brett Favre's un-retirement did on ESPN, I'm going to wager--despite never having seen you play in person--that you're part of the 10% that isn't HSAPQ's primary audience. If you powered all twenty tossups most games, then, well, maybe there's something going wrong. But you're describing an experience had by any elite playet on high school questions. Solution: play harder sets sometimes. It doesn't mean that the set didn't accomplish its purpose, which was not to challenge one of the best two or three solo players in Illinois with its leadins.
Cantaloupe (disambiguation) wrote:From what I've seen, almost all bonuses have a clear easy/middle/hard structure.
HSAPQ has just chosen to increase conversion by making the bonuses generally easier. If that means that generally competent teams get a lot of 20's and 30's, so be it.
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