And
so – at the top of the rankings – we’ve ended up about
where we started, with Adelaide and Sydney once again clearly ahead of the
rest. The Crows and the Swans put some distance between themselves and the
other top teams this week, with the Crows destroying Port Adelaide, and the
Swans easily beating Geelong on the road.
Over the next few weeks, as
we approach the end of the home-and-away season, I’m going to give a summary of
how each team’s ranking points developed through 2017. This week I’ll look at
the first six clubs in alphabetical order, which are Adelaide to Fremantle. You
can see their ranking points for each round in the graph below.
Adelaide
Crows: Adelaide has held the top ranking for most of 2017. Once
the rounds got under way the Crows only surrendered the top spot in Round 8,
following successive beltings by North Melbourne, and Melbourne at home. That
may have been the correction that revealed the Crows’ true level of ability,
because they have stayed around the 20-25 ranking points mark for most of the
time since. Still the Crows are considered by many to have the best chance of
winning the premiership this year. They have been a very good – although not
dominant – side throughout the season.
Brisbane
Lions: Brisbane has been clearly the AFL’s worst team so far in
2017, and has been on the bottom of the rankings for the entire season to date.
But having both Adelaide and Brisbane in the graph this week helps illustrate
one of the major themes for 2017: the teams became more even. The Lions have
improved from being relatively awful to merely relatively bad over the course
of the season. Their improvement picked up the most steam over the second half
of the season, particularly with their big win against Fremantle in Round 12.
Carlton
and Fremantle: These teams followed similar paths in 2017,
with both being rated below average across
2017. Fremantle had some observers fooled that it may
contend for finals earlier this year following a few close wins,
but the Dockers’ mammoth losses against Port Adelaide and Adelaide should have
had the alarm bells ringing. Carlton has steadily improved for much of the year
– with its biggest improvement in ranking points coming after it beat the GWS
Giants – but the Blues have similarly never really threatened to reach even an ‘average’
status.
Collingwood:
Speaking
of ‘average’ Collingwood has been consistently average to below average for the
majority of 2017. Their performances from
week to week have generally been reliably average,
albeit with varying results. The Magpies slipped a few weeks back after getting
comfortably beaten by Hawthorn and Essendon, but have since regained some ground
with a win against West Coast, a draw against Adelaide, and a win by a big
margin against North Melbourne.
Essendon: Obviously the big improvers of 2017. That was
not a surprise, given that the Bombers regained several
senior players from year-long suspensions. What was perhaps a
surprise was how much they improved. The Bombers rose up well
past their 2015 form to
a level that resembled
more their early-2013 performances. Young players like Zach Merrett and Joe
Daniher are clearly better than they were a couple of years ago, and combining
them with the returning veterans has resulted in a solid football team. For a
stretch in the middle of the season there they were even an
elite one.
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