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Media The Bye Effect

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The Bye has been a staple of the SFA fixture since Season 34, and with it has come two competing lines of thinking. In that other league, it is often treated as a clear advantage- a week to reset, recover, and recalibrate. Fresh legs, fewer niggles, and the opportunity to step away from the grind are all assumed to translate into improved performance on return.

Not everyone is convinced, however. There is an equally persistent view that the Bye can interrupt rhythm, dull momentum, and leave sides flat when they resume.

Despite these opposing perspectives, the Bye itself has rarely been examined in any meaningful way. This thread sets out to test the so-called “Bye Effect” across Seasons 34-40, including finals. For each season, every team coming off a bye will be tracked in their very next match, with results and margins recorded and compared across the competition. Over time, this will build into a broader dataset, allowing trends to emerge.

The central question is a simple one: does the bye confer a measurable advantage or disadvantage?
 
Season 34 New
SEASON 34
Teams coming off the bye went:
6-5-1 in H&A
2-1 in finals
Overall: 8-6-1 (57%)
Avg margin: +6.7 (all games)

This represents a slight edge, but is far from definitive. The H&A numbers sit only marginally above break-even and are influenced by a handful of stronger wins. Several sides came off the bye and lost immediately, suggesting no consistent, across-the-board benefit.

What’s more interesting is when those results occurred. Early in the season, teams coming off the bye performed strongly, winning five of the first six games. That trend reversed as the season progressed, with late-bye teams losing more often than not. Finals show a slight rebound (2-1), although the sample remains small.

S34 Verdict: The Bye confers a modest advantage overall, but one that appears to depend more on timing than the bye itself.
 
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Very interesting thread MWPP, since we had the bye last week disguised as the Wonders will be interesting to see how we go against the Demons.
 
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Very interesting thread MWPP, since we had the bye last week disguised as the Wonders will be interesting to see how we go against the Demons.
We are yet to play the Demons this season but did well the week after we played the Wonders a couple of weeks ago (just ask the Warriors!)

So I like your chances :)
 
Disclaimer. Royals consistent poor form renders our results invalid
The Royals have won a flag during my time in the league , unlike the Bears

Admittedly that was in the days before the Bye
 
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Season 35 New
SEASON 35
Teams coming off the bye went:
13-12 in H&A
2-1 in finals
Overall: 15-13 (54%)
Avg margin: +3.8 (all games)

This again represents a slight edge, but is far from definitive. The H&A numbers sit only marginally above break-even, suggesting no consistent, across-the-board benefit.

What’s more interesting is the structure of the fixture. The Round 14 mass bye fed directly into Round 15, where multiple teams coming off a bye faced each other. These “bye vs bye” matchups effectively cancel out any inherent advantage and suppress the overall signal.

Finals show a modest return (2–1), but again with a small sample. One notable case is Gold City Royals, who experienced a rare bye > QF > bye > PF sequence. Despite the extended rest, they were eliminated in the PF, offering little evidence that additional rest compounds into a meaningful advantage.

S35 Verdict: In S35 the bye appears to offer a modest advantage overall, though that effect may be influenced by fixture structure rather than the bye itself.
 
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Your thread looked at how a few teams posted during Bye week during the early part of one season

I’m focussing on the qooty :)
Oh I know, this just reminded me of my amazing graphic.
 

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Season 36 New
SEASON 36
Teams coming off the bye went:
10-3 in H&A
3-0 in finals
Overall: 13-3 (81%)
Avg margin: +26.3 (all games)

This season presents a far more positive picture. The H&A record sits comfortably above break-even, offering clear evidence of a consistent advantage, while the strong average margin reinforces a significant tilt in overall performance.

Unlike Season 35, there are no structural distortions caused by bye-on-bye matchups. And unlike Season 34, there is no clear early-season surge. Instead, results remain relatively consistent throughout, making this the cleanest test of the “bye effect” so far. One scheduling anomaly is worth noting. Ophidian Old Boys played twice across a single weekend. Therefore, only the first match following a bye has been included, with the subsequent short-turnaround game excluded.

Finals, however, again lean strongly positive. One team carried a bye directly into finals, while both teams who were coming off a bye after winning their qualifying finals went on to win their preliminary finals comfortably. This continues the trend of stronger returns in finals contexts.

S36 Verdict: A clear positive impact both during the season itself and in finals, representing the strongest evidence so far in favour of a bye advantage.
 
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