(One adjustment that I’ve made this year in terms of rating each team’s draw is that I’ve adjusted each team’s ranking so that the sum of ranking points across teams is zero. The sum of ranking points across teams is otherwise negative, because I take into account finals games. Anyone comparing my ratings of each team’s draw across years will see that this adjustment lowers the rating of the easiness of each team’s draw, and that these ratings now sum to zero.)
The easiness of each AFL team’s draw in 2014, ranked from easiest to hardest, is shown in the table below:
Therefore, on my assessment, the Western Bulldogs have the
easiest draw in 2014, and GWS has the hardest.
The rating for each team’s draw can be broken down into three
components:
-
The effect of not playing your own team: As
I’ve said before this often gets overlooked in rating each team’s draw. For
example, Hawthorn’s draw is made easier by the simple fact that they don’t have
to play Hawthorn. (This really kills GWS.)
-
Net home ground advantage: This is simply the
net effect of the adjustments for home ground advantage across the season. This
doesn’t tend to matter much because each team plays the same amount of ‘home’
and ‘away’ games, though things like how many non-Victorian teams a Victorian
teams plays at home, or the Western Bulldogs playing a ‘home’ game at Cazaly
Stadium will affect this component.
-
The effect of which teams your team plays twice:
This is the collective strength of the opponents that each teams plays twice,
with a higher rating for this component meaning that you have easier opponents
in your return bouts.
The third effect is really the main point of difference
between each team’s draw. The Bulldogs are considered to have a relatively easy
draw at this stage because three of the opponents they play twice are
low-ranked teams in GWS, Melbourne, and Gold Coast. This is in part because the
AFL has, for the 2014 fixture, broken teams into three groups: those which
finished 1-6 in 2013, those which finished 7-12, and those which finished
13-18, with the lower groups (in theory) playing more of the easier teams
twice. As
has already been noted, this has greatly helped Richmond, who fell to 7th
after their painful finals loss to Carlton, with the Tigers being granted
return matches against GWS and St. Kilda despite being only half a game off a
top four finish going into the 2013 finals (as a Richmond fan, I’m all for
this!)
On the other end of the scale, Brisbane has indeed been
savaged by the draw given their relatively low finish in 2013, while on my
assessment Essendon will also have a tough draw in 2014. I’ll leave AFL fans to
form their own conspiracy theories on this.
Cool )
ReplyDelete