Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
BuceWiki
Search
Search
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
League Balance Strategy
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
The [[League Balance Strategy]] was a strategy implemented for the [[2010 Buce League]]. It involved the co-operation of several teams, players and captains, in an effort to balance out the league coming out of the [[2009 Winter Buce League]]. Now a relic of the 2010 Buce year, the League Balance Strategy has since been ousted by analysts as a failure, and was unable to balance the league out in favourable ways. [[File:Image17.jpg|right|thumb|500px|[[Guy Bevan]], [[Charlie Rogers]] and [[Theo Rogers]] were some of the major players responsible for the balancing of the 2010 league.]] ==History== The issue of balancing the league became a talking point by the end of the [[2009 Winter Buce League]], where [[The Avalanches]] had consecutively won both professional 2009 [[Buce Leagues]] in a row, without losing a single match in that period. The other [[Quad Team]]-hailed group [[The Sunflowers]] also came second in the competition. On the other side of the spectrum, [[Novice Strike Force]] came dead last, conceding 83 points in the competition and only scoring 1. Some sceptics complained that the league left much to be desired for other players, if the same teams continued to dominate every single league. This led to turmoil for [[Buce]] organisers. After the finish of the [[2009 Winter Buce League]], at the [[2009 Winter Buce League Awards]] Ceremony, [[Charlie Rogers]] tried addressing the problem by announcing the split of long-time successful team, [[The Avalanches]], promising to help accommodate all the players into teams that would not only help spread individual skill throughout the league, but also not compromise the Avalanche's players' future in Buce. Soon after, [[Guy Bevan]] and [[Lewis Freeland]] announced that their team [[The Sunflowers]] would also share the same fate as The Avalanches, in order to help accommodate the large skill gap that the Avalanches' breakup would incur on the league. ==Challenge== During the off-season, talks begun between captains of all teams, and players of the league, in order to accommodate the [[Quad Team]] players left teamless following the post-Winter 2009 purge. This involved heavy discussion between [[Theo Rogers]], [[Lachlon Willis]], [[Michael Read]], [[Lewis Freeland]], [[Jackson Cowan]], [[Guy Bevan]] and [[Charlie Rogers]], the latter two of which acted as managers for the [[Quad Team]] players. The difficulty of the task was not only finding teams for all the 10 players previously part of Avalanches/Sunflowers, but making sure they were balanced. A strong priority was held to ensure none of the players would be put in situations or teams which they didn't feel comfortable in; either playing for teams they previously disliked, or teams with no hope of becoming a premiership team. All in all, this proved a challenge for organisers of the balancing strategy. In terms of balance, priorities were set aside by Rogers in the form of splitting up The Avalanches, namely [[Jacob Dawes]], [[Rick Osman]] and himself. {{quote|My main focus was splitting up [[Jacob Dawes]] and [[Rick Osman]].|[[Charlie Rogers]]}} [[Guy Bevan]] was also to be split from the three Avalanches, despite attempts by Rogers to have himself and Bevan join the same team in [[NSF]], however there was more resistance than there was support by league captains towards this option. [[File:Profileread3.jpg|right|thumb|300px|[[Michael Read]] acted as a consultant for [[Quad Team]] manager Charlie Rogers.]] ==Solution== After heavy speculation and extensive discussion, the player's futures were finally announced in the coming months before the [[2010 Buce League]]. [[Guy Bevan]], [[Tim Murdoch]] and [[Rick Osman]] were to join [[Novice Strike Force]] remake [[The Giants]], still under the captaincy of [[Lachlon Willis]]. [[Charlie Rogers]] would join the [[Wu-Tang Clan]]. [[Jacob Dawes]], [[Alec Forbes]], [[Nick Cherrie]], [[Ashley Everson]] and [[Joel Steele]] were chosen to be put into one team, similar to the old [[Quad Team]] of 2007. [[Lewis Freeland]] was asked by Rogers to captain the team, an offer he accepted. ==Impact== The League Balance Strategy, a year on, was analysed by pundits and organisers and was thought to mostly have been a failure. Immediate impacts involve the level of change within the league- though not as publicised as other Buce phenomena such as the founding of [[National Buce News]] or the introduction of the [[Three Square Rule]], the Balance Strategy saw the pioneers of Buce- the [[Quad Team]] and the [[Original 8]]- part ways for the security of the league, and for the dilution of skill into more teams. This was, at the time, foreign to Buce Leagues, as cross-team transfers were still incredibly rare, due to the fact that clubs and teams are made up of social groups rather than competitive factions, so this was the first example of transfers in Buce happening en masse. The Balance Strategy was also significant because it was the first time every captain in the league actually worked together and discussed ways to help the future of Buce and all its players. It was the first collaborative, communicative effort within the [[Buce League]] and was signified by the co-operation of not only all involved teams, but the [[Quad Team]] players who chose to accept their futures at the hands of the league managers. Despite this, there were many issues that plagued the strategy throughout the 2010 Buce League. The Toecutters, who were favourites for the league, forfeited so many of their matches that it ruined the balance considerably. Also, the splitting of players had a considerable affect on some teams, but not on others. The dream-team-like [[Snowflowers]] had a lackluster year, while [[Giants]] fought to a surprisingly high spot and [[Wu-Tang Clan]] generally dominated the competition, which was undesirable in the eyes of the Strategy. The failure of the strategy, and its disheartening result on the league, was a main reason the [[2010 Winter Buce League]] was postponed and eventually cancelled.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to BuceWiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
My wiki:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Toggle limited content width