Windsor Star

GREAT MINDS PUT TO THE TEST

World robotics event set for Detroit

- DOUG SCHMIDT dschmidt@postmedia.com twitter.com/schmidtcit­y

Equal parts Super Bowl, NASCAR and rock concert.

That’s how organizers describe an internatio­nal competitio­n that will see hundreds of brainy teams from around the world, including several from Windsor-Essex, it’s hoped, gather in Detroit next month for the FIRST Robotics Global Championsh­ips. An estimated 40,000 robotics fans, including CEOs and leaders from the world’s biggest corporatio­ns, are anticipate­d at the April 25-28 event, which is also expected to transform Detroit’s downtown for visitors between the main venues at Cobo Hall and Ford Field. “It’s a complete game-changer, an incredible event with nothing else like it,” gushed longtime FIRST Robotics enthusiast Irek Kusmierczy­k, a city councillor and director of partnershi­ps at regional innovation centre WEtech Alliance. “This is bigger than the Super Bowl, it’s huge.”

What makes it an even bigger sporting event, said Kusmierczy­k, will be its lasting impact. Detroit-Windsor didn’t make the shortlist of candidates for a multibilli­on-dollar Amazon investment, partly because of a perceived lack of local tech skills and talent. FIRST Robotics is all about injecting into youth an enthusiasm for science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) discipline­s. “A program like FIRST Robotics, and an event like this, prepares us for the next Amazon bid. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y,” said Kusmierczy­k, who helped introduce and expand FIRST Robotics in Windsor.

To get to Detroit, teams must get through district competitio­ns and then a provincial championsh­ip. The University of Windsor’s St. Denis Centre hosts a Windsor Essex Great Lakes Event March 3031, with 38 teams registered. The best move on to the FIRST Ontario Provincial Championsh­ips, April 12-14 in Mississaug­a.

“This really changes lives,” said FIRST Robotics regional chairman Larry Koscielski, a vice-president at industrial company CenterLine (Windsor) Ltd. He said the local program has ballooned over the past five years from about 50 students to approximat­ely 1,200 today in Windsor, Essex and Chatham-Kent.

Canada is a FIRST Robotics powerhouse, and Michigan has the highest number of teams of any state in the U.S. Last year, the Windsor area sent three teams to the world championsh­ips and four the year before. Koscielski is confident at least three local teams will make it to Detroit.

At the most competitiv­e level of FIRST Robotics, high school teams of about 25 students get six weeks to build and program robots to perform different tasks on a set floor plan — tasks like picking up a ball, delivering it around hurdles to a location and throwing it into a target. For those who have been to a FIRST event — both the St. Denis and Detroit competitio­ns are open to the public and free — the cheering is loud, the music thunderous and the action non-stop. Team members dress up, operate inside pit areas and can boast loud and colourful cheering sections. Koscielski said a third of the budget for this month’s regionals will be blown on the AV and sound system. “This is way more than robots,” said Koscielski, whose day job is as a senior manager in process and technology developmen­t. The teams, with mentors culled from academia and private industry, are set up and operated like companies, with members not just assembling operationa­l robots with hydraulic arms, drive trains and circuit boards. They are also required to be entreprene­urial, raising money, doing web design, performing community outreach, designing team brands, as well as marketing and communicat­ion strategies. Windsor’s busy industrial and tech businesses are hemorrhagi­ng millions of dollars annually because jobs in the STEM fields are going unfilled. Koscielski said it’s no different at CenterLine, where a workforce of 750 manufactur­es welding equipment, primarily for automotive customers. FIRST Robotics, he said, is opening the eyes of youths who might not have otherwise considered such a future. “It really gives young people an advantage in the knowledge economy,” said Kusmiercyz­k, adding he hopes teachers and schools will organize field trips to attend the world championsh­ips.

“The difference between our sport and any other sport is that all of our participan­ts go on to become pros,” said Koscielski. Some of the world’s biggest companies mentor FIRST teams, and he said it’s not uncommon to have CEOs down in the pits, coaching and encouragin­g competitor­s.

As for once-in-a-lifetime — Detroit also won the right to host the FIRST Robotics worlds in 2019 and 2020.

The difference between our sport and any other sport is that all of our participan­ts go on to become pros.

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 ?? DAN JANISSE ?? Teacher Lee Awad, centre, works on a robot with students Jake Blythe, left, and Steven Ward on Tuesday at Sandwich secondary school. Their robotics team “Sabre Bytes” is vying to qualify for the 2018 FIRST Robotics Global Championsh­ips in Detroit.
DAN JANISSE Teacher Lee Awad, centre, works on a robot with students Jake Blythe, left, and Steven Ward on Tuesday at Sandwich secondary school. Their robotics team “Sabre Bytes” is vying to qualify for the 2018 FIRST Robotics Global Championsh­ips in Detroit.

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