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- May 22, 2007
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As we all know, the draw is an absolute debacle. Every year we have winners and losers because for the AFL, commercial outcomes come first, and fairness a distant second.
i’m sure i’m not the only one following the Scottish Premier League this year (go Hearts). The Scots make a 38 game fixture involving 12 teams fair by having each team play the other three times. After 33 games, they split the table into top and bottom six, and have teams in each group play each other five times.
Helps to guarantee more meaningful games in latter weeks, and is completely fair.
The AFL could adopt a similar approach once the competition moves to 20 teams. After 19 rounds, we split teams into groups of four based on ladder position. Three more rounds are played to determine final ladder positions within each group. The team that plays home is just the one that played away in the most recent game.
Under this system, we’re guaranteed up to six ladder shaping, high stakes games in each of the final three rounds rather than an AFL enforced late season return leg involving Carlton and Richmond.
For a 24 game season, you could potentially have 1-6 and 7-12 playing each other five times and let the AFL do their commercial optimisation thing with teams ranked 13-20 playing five of the other seven teams in rounds 20-24.
This would also allow for the emergence of new meaningful rivalries, rather than having the AFL dictate that because Richmond v Collingwood was epic in the 1970s, it’s automatically epic now.
Tell me why this is a bad idea.
EDIT: take a look at round 23 and 24. Only two out of 18 games involve two teams currently in the top 8. Absolute fizzer.
i’m sure i’m not the only one following the Scottish Premier League this year (go Hearts). The Scots make a 38 game fixture involving 12 teams fair by having each team play the other three times. After 33 games, they split the table into top and bottom six, and have teams in each group play each other five times.
Helps to guarantee more meaningful games in latter weeks, and is completely fair.
The AFL could adopt a similar approach once the competition moves to 20 teams. After 19 rounds, we split teams into groups of four based on ladder position. Three more rounds are played to determine final ladder positions within each group. The team that plays home is just the one that played away in the most recent game.
Under this system, we’re guaranteed up to six ladder shaping, high stakes games in each of the final three rounds rather than an AFL enforced late season return leg involving Carlton and Richmond.
For a 24 game season, you could potentially have 1-6 and 7-12 playing each other five times and let the AFL do their commercial optimisation thing with teams ranked 13-20 playing five of the other seven teams in rounds 20-24.
This would also allow for the emergence of new meaningful rivalries, rather than having the AFL dictate that because Richmond v Collingwood was epic in the 1970s, it’s automatically epic now.
Tell me why this is a bad idea.
EDIT: take a look at round 23 and 24. Only two out of 18 games involve two teams currently in the top 8. Absolute fizzer.
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OVERALL SEASON STRUCTURE
MARCH–JULY: Fixture Phase 1
ROUND 10 SPLIT ROUND
JULY–AUGUST: Fixture Phase 2
NORTHERN CLUSTER (NSW/QLD/ACT)
SOUTHERN CLUSTER (WA/SA/TAS)
VIC WEST CLUSTER — Barassi Shield
SHIELD SYSTEM
AUGUST–SEPTEMBER
