Skip to content
Drive Team·Lesson 15 of 34

Reading the Field and In-Match Strategy

How the coach watches the whole field, uses scouting data, and adapts the plan as a match unfolds.

Sign in to track progress, earn XP, and save lessons.

Watch the field, not just your robot

The defining skill of a great coach, per the Best Practices for Drive Coaches resource, is to watch the field rather than fixate on your own robot. The driver and operator are already looking at the robot; the coach's value is the big picture — where the opponents are, where your partners are, the score, the clock, and where the next opportunity or threat is forming. A coach who tunnel-visions on their own robot adds nothing the driver doesn't already see.

Use scouting to plan, then adapt

Good in-match strategy starts before the match with scouting. Teams gather two kinds of intel:

  • Pit scouting — talking to other teams in their pits about robot capabilities.
  • Match (stand) scouting — recording, match by match, what each robot actually does: points scored, auto vs. teleop contribution, position, reliability.

This data (often aggregated and viewable on The Blue Alliance) feeds the alliance strategy meeting before each match, where alliance coaches agree on each robot's job in auto, teleop, and endgame and plan field routes to avoid congestion with partners.

Adapt as the match unfolds

No plan survives first contact. The coach continuously re-reads the field and adjusts:

  • If a partner is struggling, redirect your robot to cover their scoring or play defense.
  • If an opponent is dominating one area, decide whether to contest it or out-score elsewhere.
  • If your robot is damaged or slow, switch to the highest-value role it can still perform.
  • As the clock runs down, shift the whole alliance toward endgame on time (next lesson).

Defense and positioning

Reading the field also means knowing when to play defense. Effective defense is positional — getting between an opponent and their scoring location, or clogging a lane — without committing fouls. The coach calls defense based on the score and matchup; the driver executes it. Conversely, the coach should recognize when defense is being played on you and call routes around it.

Keep the driver informed, not overloaded

The coach translates all this field-reading into a few high-value calls, not a play-by-play. The goal is to give the driver the one or two pieces of information that change what they should do right now — "partner's down, go score the left side," "defender on your tail, take the long lane" — and otherwise let the driver execute the muscle memory they've drilled. Field awareness is only useful if it becomes a clear, timely call.

Key takeaways

  • The coach's edge is watching the whole field — opponents, partners, score, and clock.
  • Pre-match scouting (pit and stand) and tools like The Blue Alliance inform the alliance strategy meeting.
  • Plans must adapt mid-match: cover struggling partners, contest or avoid opponents, fall back to feasible roles.
  • Translate field-reading into a few high-value calls rather than overloading the driver.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.What is the main purpose of scouting before and during FRC matches as it relates to in-match strategy?

2.When a planned strategy isn't working mid-match (e.g., a scoring lane is blocked or a partner is disabled), what does good "reading the field" call for?

3.In FRC, why does the value returned by DriverStation.getMatchTime() need to be used with caution for in-match decisions?

Answer every question to submit.