Remove this Banner Ad

Media The Sweet FA Squiggle - updated with Baseline, Premiers, League Evolution + every individual team + S41 R7 snapshot + S41 R11 Snapshot

  • Thread starter Thread starter MWPP
  • Start date Start date
  • Tagged users Tagged users None

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

1772772774939.webp

I have been a long-time follower of The Squiggle from that other league. So I’ve put together a Sweet FA version of the Squiggle, using scoring data from Seasons 34–40 (both Home & Away and Finals).

Instead of just looking at ladder positions, the squiggle looks at how teams actually play ie Points For (offence) and Points Against (defence). Plot those together and you get a map of the league.

Teams naturally fall into four zones:
-Flag Contenders – high scoring, strong defence (top right quadrant)
-Entertaining Chaos – high scoring, leaky defence (top left quadrant)
-Defensive Grinders – tough to score against, low scoring (bottom right quadrant)
-Rebuild Zone – struggling at both ends (bottom left quadrant)

Stay tuned for updates relating to seasonal progress and trends
 
Season 41 Baseline New
Season 41 Baseline Squiggle

This Season 41 starting point was calculated based on the average PF and PA for each club across S34-40 including finals.

Short-term fluctuations will move teams around the squiggle during the season, but this baseline shows where teams have settled over time. In other words, it aggregates seven full seasons plus finals so it effectively represents each club’s long-term offensive and defensive identity.


1772773707883.webp

Summary
1. Hawks and Old Boys set the Benchmark
Across S34-S40 these two clubs sit closest to the contender quadrant with strong scoring and solid defence. These positions reflect their sustained success across this era with two flags apiece.

2. Demons and Gumbies bring the entertaining chaos
These clubs both score heavily but concede plenty placing them in the classic 'shootout' zone. If their defence tightens they can quickly jump into contender territory.

3. Bears are the dour, defensive outlier
The Bears fit furthest along the defensive side of the chart, to the point where I had to adjust the scale on my graph. The Bears concede very few points but they can also struggle to score.

4. Roys and Wonders sit in the competitive middle
These teams cluster around the league average. Whilst they aren't extreme in either direction, they are also consistently competitive.

5. The Royals are the strugglers of the league
The Royals are the only team to currently sit in the dreaded Rebuild Zone. The only way from here is up
 

Log in to remove this Banner Ad

Premiers New
Premiers

1772776491289.webp

  • Overall, the league has shifted from being predominantly defensive, to predominantly offensive. However, the S40 Dragons were a balanced team. Could this be the start of another run of more defensive and/or balanced premiers?
  • The S38–S39 Hawks sit in the strongest all-round area of the premiership cluster
  • The S34 Bombers are the clear outlier, with lower-scoring games driven by a tighter defence than subsequent premiers.
  • The S35 and S37 Ophidian Old Boys had contrasting styles. That famous S36 spoon forced a return to the drawing board, and they reaped the reward.
  • The S36 Gumbies sit closest to the middle pack, which makes their breakthrough flag in a competitive year especially impressive.

I wondered if those trends were caused by different season lengths. However, analysing the premiers on a per-game basis results in similar overall trends.

Two clear groups of premiers emerged. High-scoring premiers (S37, S38, S39 and S40) all sit in the 100-106 PF/game range. Defence-leaning premiers (S34, S35 and S36) all score 91-93 PF/game but with a stronger defence.


1772776366284.webp
 
Last edited:
A suggestion would be to add points for premiership winning teams as a frame of reference
Thanks for the suggestion. Yes I will be marking the premiership teams out visually on the graphs. Double checking if this is what you meant though?
 
Would be interesting to see how many games each team has played in what conditions over that time frame. Dare say the Bears, Warriors and Swamprats play in the rain the most often.
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Historical Squiggle with Premiers New
Historical Squiggle with Premiers

1772778373158.webp

Here is the Historical Squiggle with Premiers. Each line tracks a club’s season-by-season position based on Points For (attack) and Points Against (defence), showing how their statistical profile shifts over time.

The stars mark premiership seasons, highlighting where the competition’s champions sat on the squiggle.
While the Premiership styles differ, every champion clearly sits in the upper half of the squiggle where strong scoring and solid defence intersect.

Conversely, bad teams actually cluster much more tightly than the good teams as they almost always share the same traits- low scoring and leaky defence.

The squiggle also shows that most teams move diagonally from bottom left to top right (or vice versa) over time and attack. In other words, attack and defence tend to improve or decline together.

It also suggests that premiership teams are rarely one-season outliers. Most flags come from clubs that spend multiple seasons near the top of the chart, while the biggest movements tend to occur among middle-pack teams pushing toward contention.
 
View attachment 2543379

I have been a long-time follower of The Squiggle from that other league. So I’ve put together a Sweet FA version of the Squiggle, using scoring data from Seasons 34–40 (both Home & Away and Finals).

Instead of just looking at ladder positions, the squiggle looks at how teams actually play ie Points For (offence) and Points Against (defence). Plot those together and you get a map of the league.

Teams naturally fall into four zones:
-Flag Contenders – high scoring, strong defence (top right quadrant)
-Entertaining Chaos – high scoring, leaky defence (top left quadrant)
-Defensive Grinders – tough to score against, low scoring (bottom right quadrant)
-Rebuild Zone – struggling at both ends (bottom left quadrant)

Stay tuned for updates relating to seasonal progress and trends

Virgin confirmed.
 
League Evolution and Premiers vs. League by Season New
League Evolution

One interesting way to view the squiggle is to track not just teams, but the league itself. The chart below plots the average Points For and Points Against across the whole competition each season. In other words, it shows where the centre of the league sat stylistically. Teams move around the squiggle individually but this particular chart shows how the entire league environment shifts over time.

1772787441500.webp

S34- Defensive Era - The league sits in the lower-scoring defensive region of the squiggle..
S35 to S37 - The Attacking Explosion - Scoring rapidly increases and the entire competition shifts upward. By S37 the league reaches its highest attacking peak.
S38–S39 - High-Powered Contenders - The league stabilises at a high-scoring level. This period produces some of the most dominant attacking teams
S40 - Return Toward Balance - The league drifts back toward the centre of the map.

Premiers vs. League by Season

1772787978993.webp
Premiers rarely settle at the league average- they tend to rise above, especially on offense.
  • The S34 Bombers dominated with a rock-solid defence in an era built on tough, low-scoring games.
  • The S36 Gumbies pulled off a remarkable flag win in a tightly contested, balanced season.
  • The S38–S39 Hawks were a scoring powerhouse, leaving the rest of the league trailing.
  • The S40 Dragons struck the perfect balance as the league tightened, signalling a bright future for competition.
With the broader league trends established, the next step is to zoom in and see how each club moved across the squiggle during this period.
 
Last edited:

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

That's an interesting representation of a real squiggle.
Did you run out of Braklet Qink before you could draw the rest of the squiggle?

We've moved on to other colorants...

1772800591762.webp
 
Premiers

View attachment 2543429

  • Overall, the league has shifted from being predominantly defensive, to predominantly offensive. However, the S40 Dragons were a balanced team. Could this be the start of another run of more defensive and/or balanced premiers?
  • The S38–S39 Hawks sit in the strongest all-round area of the premiership cluster
  • The S34 Bombers are the clear outlier, with lower-scoring games driven by a tighter defence than subsequent premiers.
  • The S35 and S37 Ophidian Old Boys had contrasting styles. That famous S36 spoon forced a return to the drawing board, and they reaped the reward.
  • The S36 Gumbies sit closest to the middle pack, which makes their breakthrough flag in a competitive year especially impressive.

I wondered if those trends were caused by different season lengths. However, analysing the premiers on a per-game basis results in similar overall trends.

Two clear groups of premiers emerged. High-scoring premiers (S37, S38, S39 and S40) all sit in the 100-106 PF/game range. Defence-leaning premiers (S34, S35 and S36) all score 91-93 PF/game but with a stronger defence.


View attachment 2543427
Points per post.

The last three premiers will never be defeated on that metric.
 
Points per post.

The last three premiers will never be defeated on that metric.
Haha

I would've assumed earlier premiers would easily have them covered but maybe not
 
Haha

I would've assumed earlier premiers would easily have them covered but maybe not
Yeah that’s true.

But best in a decade is still fine!

(FWIW I think this analysis lends itself quite nicely to posting - post contributed v post conceded). Maybe as your next thread!
 
Season 41 Baseline Squiggle

This Season 41 starting point was calculated based on the average PF and PA for each club across S34-40 including finals.

Short-term fluctuations will move teams around the squiggle during the season, but this baseline shows where teams have settled over time. In other words, it aggregates seven full seasons plus finals so it effectively represents each club’s long-term offensive and defensive identity.


View attachment 2543391

Summary
1. Hawks and Old Boys set the Benchmark
Across S34-S40 these two clubs sit closest to the contender quadrant with strong scoring and solid defence. These positions reflect their sustained success across this era with two flags apiece.

2. Demons and Gumbies bring the entertaining chaos
These clubs both score heavily but concede plenty placing them in the classic 'shootout' zone. If their defence tightens they can quickly jump into contender territory.

3. Bears are the dour, defensive outlier
The Bears fit furthest along the defensive side of the chart, to the point where I had to adjust the scale on my graph. The Bears concede very few points but they can also struggle to score.

4. Roys and Wonders sit in the competitive middle
These teams cluster around the league average. Whilst they aren't extreme in either direction, they are also consistently competitive.

5. The Royals are the strugglers of the league
The Royals are the only team to currently sit in the dreaded Rebuild Zone. The only way from here is up
Sure, we'll just delist half of the 22 active posters we've had this week and start again, because that is the only control we have over a random Sim. 🥴
 
Sure, we'll just delist half of the 22 active posters we've had this week and start again, because that is the only control we have over a random Sim. 🥴
I’ve nearly played 300 games and have no flag to show for it
So preaching to the choir haha
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Remove this Banner Ad

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Back
Top Bottom