In the Wooden Finger Depot’s AFL Power Rankings, the more
recent a game is the more weight it carries. But some might think that recent
games do not carry enough weight; for example, it took a while for the rankings
to recognise that Port Adelaide and Essendon (until recently) had stepped up
this season, and that St. Kilda, Adelaide, and West Coast had taken a step
back. What would happen then if recent games were given even more weight – what
if an exponential function was used to assign weightings instead?
In the rankings, each of a team’s past 22 games
is given a weight. Currently, the weight is a linear function of how recent the
game is, as shown in the graph above (most recent games are on the right). To
derive an exponential function, I made the arbitrary choice to reduce the
weight on the least recent game by a quarter, and then found the multiplicative
factor that got the weights to add up to 1, give or take .0005.
What
happens to the rankings after I do this? Well, essentially, what you get is an
indication of which teams have hit form over the past few weeks. In general,
and not surprisingly, the teams that have been in form over the past few weeks
are also the teams that have been in form over the entirety of the season; that
is, the exponential rankings are not too different from the ordinary linear rankings. But there are some big changes; the Western Bulldogs have been a much
better team recently than they have been over the long haul (up in Carlton/Adelaide/Port
Adelaide territory), while Essendon has been much worse (essentially not too
much better than St. Kilda).
I’m
going to stick with the good old linear weights, but what do people think? Do
the exponential weightings look like they give a better indication of where
teams are at?
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