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Top 5 was the best system
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I'm not particularly against a final ten system like the one Dan proposed, if it goes to final 10. It's not a bad one at all. But the argument you're putting forward up there isn't furthering anyone's argument.
So, if it did go to a final-10 one day, would you prefer the 4-week system I am in favour of?
Or would you prefer the extension of the current finals system to 5 weeks, where you'd have 7v10 and 8v9 in the first week, and then it's the same system we have now from weeks 2-5?
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No they didn't. If Collinwood lose any final from here on in they will not receive a second chance.
Oh really? Do you still think they "don't need it" if they lose this Friday night?
I never said that. I said that under the current system the top team rarely gets a double chance for losing. The double chance goes to 3rd and 4th usually.
The top 4 teams get EITHER a second chance OR a week off. One or the other, but never both.
Hawthorn and West Coast received a second chance
Collingwood and Geelong received a week off.
I'm suggesting that under a knockout final-10, that if the week off is 100% guranteed, you then don't need a second chance. Currently Collingwood have to fight for the week off. They have a 50% chance of getting it, or a 50% chance of using the double chance.
I am suggesting that a 100% guaranteed week off is an exact mathematicla replacement for a double chance. Instead of a 50% chance of using a double chance and a 50% chance of having a weke off, you have a 0% chance of using a double chance and a 100% chance of having a week off.
I would argue that people like and enjoy the knockout finals far more than finals where you get a second chance for losing. You're speaking about the whole system, which people are culturally used to. I believe the public would totally fall in love with a knockout final-10.
This is the argument right here that angers me. Finals are about WINNING. If Geelong lost to Collingwood in the 2007 Prelim, that would have been a "freak result" and Geelong would have bene eliminated after one loss. How is a total knockout system any different? It's exactly the same thing.
In 2007 for example Geelong could be eliminated in their 2nd and 3rd finals with no second chance? So why not their first final? PROVIDED they played the lowest seeded team (8th). If 1st lose to 8th they don't deserve to progress, just like if Geelong had lost to 6th-placed Collingwood in the 2007 Prelim they wouldn't have deserved to progress. It's exactly the same thing.
Good teams will be prepared on the day. They will PERFORM ON THE DAY. They will do what good teams do, and they will do what finals demand.... and that is win. Finals are about winning, and progressing. Finals aren't about getting second chances for losing.
I'm not interested in discussing that, because you are getting into personal characteristics instead of worrying about the topic. Maybe I do argue my point in a very detailed and persuasive way. I don't care. That's my choice and my style. The most important thing is to stick to topic. Argue the topic not the poster.
That final 10 system of Dan's is a terrible! The best part of the current system is that you play the three other best teams of the year, and have to beat at least two of them. His system means you can win the flag with just one hard game...
Swiftdog, what are you arguing for? You've lost me. I thought you were arguing for a knockout system. In the examples above it'd be even worse. 1st would play something like 9th in week 2, with both after the same reward, survival.
It's really quite simple. In each of those cases above, 1st has a relatively easy opponent, and 4th has a relatively difficult opponent. Which is exactly the sort of thing Dan's been banging on about all this time.
And in every one of those examples, the team finishing first won. So it's not exactly a recommendation for finishing 4th, is it? In the unlikely event that 4th does beat 1st, then 1st get a second chance.
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I'm not particularly against a final ten system like the one Dan proposed, if it goes to final 10. It's not a bad one at all. But the argument you're putting forward up there isn't furthering anyone's argument.
Dan26, I once heard an argument about why we should never have a 1v8 2v7 etc knockout final series. I will reiterate it for your benefit.
Usually, more times than not, the number one seed has qualified for the finals weeks in advance of other teams ranked below it. On the other hand, seed 8 has virtually been playing finals for the final 4 or 5 rounds as it fights and scraps to get in. Chances are, seed 8 has already had to win a couple of cut throat matches to qualify. So seed 8 is already finals battle hardened. Seed 1 on the other hand has most likely been preserving itself ala the Pies in the final round this year and has probably not experienced the pressure cooker for a while.
Added to that, seed 8 also has the advantage of the "nothing to lose" mentality.
So what could eventuate under the proposal you are so adamant about is the sitting duck theory. Seed 1 could be made to feel like a sitting duck.
In theory seed 1 should beat seed 8 but it's unfair to put seed 1 in a position where it feels like a sitting duck.
Again, not my argument.
The irony of your statement is that people are arguing that the current system is the fairest. But is it? Really? The top team has to beat 2nd, 3rd and 4th to win the flag. Sounds pretty unfair on the top team to me.
The top team has earnt the right to play the weakest team. They are the best team, they deserve that privilidge.
With the current system, yes you get some good match-ups with 1v4 and 2v3, but those matches are not do-or-die, so as "good" as those match-ups are on paper, they are not as good or as marketable as the same top 4 match-ups (1v3, 2v4) in the prelims, which are the same quality, BUT there is more at stake. It is do or die.
In a knockout final-10, 1st would play either 8,9 or 10 in their first final after a week off. 2nd would play either 7th, 8th or 9th.
Now those matches might not appear as close on paper as the 1v4 2v3 matches under the current system, but remember they are knockout. They are do or die. The 1v4, 2v3 matches are not. Now that doesn't mean that the 1v4 2v3 matches are not exciting under the current system, but they are not AS exciting as what they would be if they were knockout.
I would reckon that any decrease in the marketability of the matches that 1st and 2nd play against their weaker opponents (which is debatable anyway) is made up for by the fact that the season is on the line for 1st and 2nd in those matches.
The top team should be given every opportunity to have the easiest run to the Grand Final.
Geelong got shafted big time by the old final 8 system in 1997.
They finished the season in second position so they got scheluled to play 7th place North Melb on the Sunday night. Back in those days night games at the MCG were North Melbourne's specialty and the fact that is was a Sunday night game caused most of the Geelong supporters to stay away in droves, might as well have just classified as a North Melb home game. When Geelong lost that game, they them copped the double whammy and ended up playing the next week in Adelaide (despite finishing higher than them on the ladder).
Most of the powers that be at Geelong summed it up as Geelong would have had a better finals run if they finished third rather than second.
Geelong were the victims of the then final eight system.
Dan26 said "The top team has to beat 2nd, 3rd and 4th to win the flag. Sounds pretty unfair on the top team to me."

The irony of your statement is that people are arguing that the current system is the fairest. But is it? Really? The top team has to beat 2nd, 3rd and 4th to win the flag. Sounds pretty unfair on the top team to me.
The top team has earnt the right to play the weakest team. They are the best team, they deserve that privilidge.
With the current system, yes you get some good match-ups with 1v4 and 2v3, but those matches are not do-or-die, so as "good" as those match-ups are on paper, they are not as good or as marketable as the same top 4 match-ups (1v3, 2v4) in the prelims, which are the same quality, BUT there is more at stake. It is do or die.
In a knockout final-10, 1st would play either 8,9 or 10 in their first final after a week off. 2nd would play either 7th, 8th or 9th.
Now those matches might not appear as close on paper as the 1v4 2v3 matches under the current system, but remember they are knockout. They are do or die. The 1v4, 2v3 matches are not. Now that doesn't mean that the 1v4 2v3 matches are not exciting under the current system, but they are not AS exciting as what they would be if they were knockout.
I would reckon that any decrease in the marketability of the matches that 1st and 2nd play against their weaker opponents (which is debatable anyway) is made up for by the fact that the season is on the line for 1st and 2nd in those matches.
The top team should be given every opportunity to have the easiest run to the Grand Final.
No, that isn't ironic at all.
The system is fair because the best teams for the year play each other.
Your system gift wraps the flag for the top team
Dan26 said "The top team has to beat 2nd, 3rd and 4th to win the flag. Sounds pretty unfair on the top team to me." I disagree - I think that challenge is the best element of the current system, the testing against the very best sides - magnificent!
No, that isn't ironic at all.
The system is fair because the best teams for the year play each other.
Your system gift wraps the flag for the top team
They are not required to win the Qualifying Final. It is not a pre-requistite for winning the flag.
Geelong got shafted big time by the old final 8 system in 1997.
They finished the season in second position so they got scheluled to play 7th place North Melb on the Sunday night. Back in those days night games at the MCG were North Melbourne's specialty and the fact that is was a Sunday night game caused most of the Geelong supporters to stay away in droves, might as well have just classified as a North Melb home game. When Geelong lost that game, they them copped the double whammy and ended up playing the next week in Adelaide (despite finishing higher than them on the ladder).
Most of the powers that be at Geelong summed it up as Geelong would have had a better finals run if they finished third rather than second.
Geelong were the victims of the then final eight system.