Five
rounds into the 2018 season the majority of teams have three or more wins. But
which of them are really above average?
If you were just looking at
the AFL ladder at the moment it might be a little hard to tell which teams are
actually the strongest finals contenders in 2018. Twelve teams – two-thirds of the league – have won three or more of
their five matches so far. But which teams, once you take into account
their fixtures so far, have actually been the most impressive? And which of
them look the most likely to sustain their good performances?
The Power Rankings were
designed to answer exactly these types of questions. It differentiates strong
wins from narrow ones, and strong opponents from weaker ones. Clearly, as you
can see from the table above, it still rates Richmond and Adelaide highly, and doesn’t
think much about Gold Coast’s credentials. Also it’s not yet convinced about
teams like North Melbourne or Fremantle, despite some impressive wins from both
teams this year.
For teams like North Melbourne
and Fremantle, some of this scepticism comes from their relatively poor
performances in 2017. Based on their 2018 performances alone most of the teams
that have won three or more matches in 2018 have been at least decent. With the
exception of Gold Coast the average
net margins in 2018 of all these teams, adjusted for home ground advantage and
opponent strength, have been at least near zero (see table below). Further, of
the rest, Fremantle is the only team I’d say hasn’t yet shown the potential to
stick with the others.
We can divide these sides into
four groups: “proven to be good”, “could be good”, “probably not above
average”, and “well below average”.
“Proven to be good”
The first group of sides
should be fairly uncontroversial – some ups and downs aside they have been the
consistently best-performed teams over the past year or so: Richmond, Adelaide,
Sydney, Geelong, and GWS. They were the top five sides last year, and have all
put in at least a couple of good performances so far in 2018.
“Could be good”
On 2018 form alone Hawthorn,
Collingwood and West Coast have been about as good as the above sides, with a
couple of impressive wins each and generally decent performances. What keeps
the Power Rankings from rating them as highly for now is that they were only
around average last season. (West Coast finished sixth after the finals, but
just barely made it into the finals series.)
Port Adelaide was a good side
last year, their struggles against top sides notwithstanding. However since
their great win in Sydney in Round 2 their performances over the past few weeks
have been below average, and it’s not clear that they are one of the better
sides anymore.
North Melbourne is a more complicated
case. They were clearly a below average side last year, and have lost to Gold Coast
and Melbourne this year. And two of their three wins have been against ‘bad’
sides in St. Kilda and Carlton. However those wins were thrashings and being
able to beat up on ‘bad’ sides – despite the ‘flat-track bully’ stigma – is
generally a good sign that you are no longer a bad side yourself.
“Probably not above average”
Fremantle was well below
average last year, and have not beaten an above average side so far in 2018.
But they do at least appear to be much improved, particularly with their big
win against the Bulldogs on the weekend. They are around average on 2018 form
alone.
“Well below average”
Gold Coast did
start the season well, with wins against North and Carlton that were
good enough to offset them being against below average sides. But their trips
to Perth did not go well, and their latest win was a narrow one against
lowly-ranked Brisbane. They may already have enough wins now to not finish last, but I don't expect the Suns to trouble the other finals contenders this year.
No comments:
Post a Comment