The Weather Experience
Tonga Bob
Call me Ishmael
- Oct 26, 2013
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"Today a young man on acid realised that the simulator is merely energy condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as losing, qooty is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves.
Here's Bob with the weather..."
Thanks Bill.
Yesterday as I was getting ready to play the Gumbies up in their house I noticed the cloudy conditions outside and thought to myself "haven't seen much of that around this season". That got me thinking about the great meteorologists from Sweet and how they used to tell us about the weather conditions around the place, in particular my old friend and fellow Smurf Agent93. So to fill the gap of weather reporting in recent times I've donned the bag of fruit, thrown some weather icons all over a map and have had a butcher's at what Huey's dished up in season 39 after round 13 when all teams have had one bye each. This is what I found...
I consulted the head honcho at the Bureau of Mobbeorology who confirmed that there are five different weather conditions in Sweet - Cloudy, Fine, Warm, Rainy and Muddy, with Cloudy being the most favourable for playing qooty and muddy the least favourable. So I assigned appropriate weightings to each weather condition to come up with a Weather Ranking, which you can see above.
The key takeaways from this are:
- The Old Boys have had by far the most favourable weather conditions in the league, with pretty much twice as many cloudy days as the next best team and zero games played in rainy or muddy conditions,
- The Hawks are the next most favoured team, with only one game played in wet weather,
- The Dragons & Bears combined have had one game with either of the two most favourable conditions, though the Dragons get more warm days than any other team apart from the Demons),
- The rain in Sweet falls mainly in the South with the Swamprats, Wonders, Warriors & Bears having the most rainy days,
- There's drainage issues at Abu Grahib, the Snow Dome & the Stadium in the Sky, as any precipitation there turns muddy more often.
What does that mean for qooty results? Well it's a mixed bag really. In working out the correlation between weather and ladder positions, there's three distinct cohorts - those teams that have a strong positive correlation between weather conditions and qooty results (those with a ladder differential of 3 or under), those that have a weak correlation (ladder differential between 4 & 8) and those that have a strong negative correlation (ladder differential of 9 and above). Here's the skinny on that:
Two thirds of the clubs have a strong positive correlation between weather conditions and qooty results, which shows that weather does indeed affect how teams fare. The counterargument to this though are the outliers, being the three teams who have a strong negative correlation. Coincidentally it's three teams that sat on either the top or the bottom of the ladder after round 13. The Bears have received the worst of the weather yet sit on top of the ladder, while the Old Boys & the Hawks have received the best of the weather yet are in the bottom three of the ladder. [NB: the Demons exception can be attributed to unique high altitude conditions]
What conclusions can we draw from this? Are the Bears perfectly suited for wet weather qooty? Do the OOFs & the Hawks suffer from sunstroke, along with the Demons who had the equal most warm days? What we can say though is that weather affects qooty, both from a team perspective and individually, as the lists of highest DT points & disposal havers are dominated by teams with a higher weather ranking.
I'll provide a further update at the end of the home and away season, but for now it's back to AnUltimateRessie with the latest election coverage.




