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Scouting & Strategy·Lesson 16 of 32

Pre-Match Strategy and the Drive Team

Before each match, the drive team uses scouting to assign roles and write a plan that plays to the alliance's strengths.

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The drive team

FRC lets a small drive team operate the robot from the alliance station during a match. The manual defines a DRIVE TEAM as up to five people from the same team, made up of four roles — up to three DRIVERS, up to three HUMAN PLAYERS (DRIVERS and HUMAN PLAYERS must all be pre-college students), one DRIVE COACH (a guide who may be a student or an adult), and one TECHNICIAN — with the constraint that no more than one member of the drive team may be a non-student. The manual uses the term "DRIVERS" for what most teams split into a driver and an operator role. The TECHNICIAN is part of the drive team and may help set the robot up on and remove it from the field, but is not one of the people operating the robot during the match. The on-field roles:

  • Driver: controls the drivetrain (where the robot goes).
  • Operator: the second driver, controlling mechanisms such as arms, elevators, intakes, and shooters.
  • Human player: performs in-match tasks the game allows from outside the field (for example, in 2026 REBUILT, delivering FUEL) and gives the driver strategic help.
  • Drive coach: the on-field strategist and leader; meets with partner coaches between matches, makes broad in-match decisions, and keeps the team calm and organized.

What pre-match strategy is

Before each qualification match the drive coach (and a strategist if you have one) builds a match plan: a short, agreed plan for how your alliance will win this specific match. The FIRST guide describes this as using scouting data on the opposing robots to find ways to win with your alliance's skills, and projecting opponents' patterns so you can counter them.

How to build a pre-match plan

  1. Look up the six robots. Pull your two partners and three opponents from your scouting and from EPA/OPR. Know each robot's strengths, weaknesses, autonomous routine, and reliability.
  2. Estimate the matchup. Roughly, will this be a close match or a blowout? EPA-based win probabilities help. Close matches deserve more planning.
  3. Assign roles within your alliance. Decide who scores where and who, if anyone, plays defense, so your three robots do not crowd the same space or fight over the same scoring location.
  4. Coordinate autonomous. Auto routines can collide. Agree with partners on starting positions and paths so robots do not crash, and so you cover the most valuable auto actions. (Remember auto is short — 20 seconds in 2026 REBUILT — so a clean, reliable routine beats an ambitious one.)
  5. Plan the endgame. Decide endgame intentions early; endgame points and ranking points are often decisive and time-pressured.
  6. Pick the win condition. Are you maximizing your own scoring, or shutting down the opponent's best robot with defense? Name the single most important thing your robot must do.

The alliance meeting

In qualification, you usually meet your two partners only minutes before the match. Top drive coaches use that time efficiently: introduce roles, state the plan in one or two sentences, confirm auto starting spots, and agree on endgame. Brevity matters; an overcomplicated plan falls apart under pressure.

Keep it simple and adaptable

A plan is a starting point, not a script. Robots break, opponents surprise you, and the field is chaotic. The best plans are simple enough to remember and flexible enough to change mid-match, which is exactly why in-match communication (the next lesson) matters so much.

Key takeaways

  • The on-field drive team is up to two drivers (driver + operator), one or more human players, and a drive coach; a technician only helps set up and remove the robot.
  • Pre-match strategy uses scouting on all six robots to assign roles, coordinate auto, plan endgame, and name one win condition.
  • Meet partners early, keep the plan to a sentence or two, and design it to be simple and adaptable.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.What is the maximum size of an FRC drive team for a single match, and how many of them may be non-students?

2.What is the technician's primary responsibility on the drive team?

3.During a match, what is the drive coach permitted to do?

Answer every question to submit.