The
Sydney Swans – consistently a good team in recent years, and one of the best
teams coming into the 2018 season – are in a spot of bother.
The Sydney Swans have been a
good team for
most of the past fifteen years. So if they have a bad few weeks,
there is a fair amount of faith they will come back. Even when they lost their
first six matches last season they
were still considered a decent side. They proved to be even
better than that – ending
up as one of the best teams in 2017 – but coming from so far back
made it a hard path to the premiership.
This year the Swans have been
generally good again. However some worrying signs are starting to emerge for
one of the AFL’s most reliably high-performing sides.
The
Swans had an absolute shocker this week … but maybe we shouldn’t have been quite
as surprised as we were
On the weekend, the Swans lost
by four goals to the very lowly-ranked Gold Coast Suns. After adjusting for
Sydney’s home ground ‘advantage’ (we’ll get to this) and the strength of the
opposition, this is estimated to be the equivalent of an 11 goal loss against
an average side.
That is the Swans’ worst
‘adjusted net margin’ since losing to Melbourne by 73 points in Round 17 2010.
In terms of the rankings it puts them now just above average, and in eighth
place.
The Swans have been missing a
few ‘big names’ recently. However, even
HPN’s player-based tipping system rated them an 80 per cent chance of beating
Gold Coast on the weekend.
Sydney has lost the most
ranking points of any team in the past five matches, although until this week’s
disaster they had still been going OK in terms of their margins. However in two
of those losses – against Richmond, and Geelong – the Swans’ relative accuracy
in front of goal may have made things look closer than they were.
Sydney kicked 11.1 against
Richmond, meaning they had 12 scoring shots to the Tigers’ 23, and
they got the ball inside 50 only 70 per cent as much as the Tigers did.
Against Geelong the Cats kicked a highly inaccurate 8.23, meaning they had 31
scoring shots to the Swans’ 14. The
Swans got the ball inside 50 less than 80 per cent as much as
Geelong did.
Hence if the rankings were
based on scoring shots rather than margins we would have already seen Sydney
start to dip. On Matter of Stats’ rating
system based on scoring shots the Swans were already
considered just an average team going into this round.
Away
sweet away
An unusual aspect of the
Swans’ 2018 season is that they have been really good away from their home
ground, and pretty bad on it. In terms of wins and losses they have three wins
and five losses at home (not including their ‘neutral’ match against GWS), and
seven wins and one loss when playing away.
In terms of net margins
adjusted for home ground advantage and opposition strength, Sydney has an
average adjusted net margin of -17 at home (see chart below), which includes
losses to Gold Coast and Adelaide. Playing away their average adjusted net
margin is +29, including wins against West Coast, Geelong, and Hawthorn. It’s all
a bit weird … (I’m sure someone can try to explain what is going on, but I’m
not going to attempt it here.)
Given the Swans’ horrible
home and great away record I’ve seen some Sydney supporters suggest that they
are better off finishing seventh or eighth, and then trying to win four away
finals to win the premiership. And indeed Sydney has been a very good team ‘on
the road’ this year. However, as last year demonstrated for the Swans, even for
a very good team having to win four straight finals is not the ideal path.
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