Archive for Power Rankings

Things have been a little quiet around here lately, with just the All Blacks playing and not very well. But thankfully the Air New Zealand cup gets underway on Thursday night and will treat us to 13 weeks of the best provincial rugby New Zealand has to offer.

With that in mind, Sports After Dark will be publishing our power rankings for the Air New Zealand Cup, along with an experimental ranking system being prepared for next year’s Super 14. Alongside the power rankings will be the return of the weekly column Inside The Numbers appearing every Wednesday taking a look at various statistics from around the Air New Zealand Cup.

As with the Super 14, week one power rankings will not be published as teams with a 1-0 record end up with a ranking of 67 and those with an 0-1 record end up on 33.

I am also looking at doing a series of audio interviews with Canterbury players, as well as publishing all of the post match press conferences online.

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With just one round remaining there are seven teams still in the hunt for just four semi final spots. Applying Sports After Dark’s two ranking formulas reveals who is going to fight another day, and who will be planning for 2010 this time next week.

Here’s how I’m predicting the table to look, without any bonus points, next Monday:

Sports After Dark
Bulls 46
Chiefs 45
Hurricanes 43
Crusaders 41
Waratahs 40
Brumbies 37
Sharks 36
Force 35
Blues 31
Stormers 27
Highlanders 24
Lions 24
Reds 18
Cheetahs 12
Hollinger
Bulls 46
Chiefs 45
Hurricanes 43
Crusaders 41
Waratahs 40
Brumbies 37
Sharks 36
Force 35
Blues 31
Stormers 27
Highlanders 24
Lions 24
Reds 18
Cheetahs 12

The Sharks, who just two weeks ago were predicted to be in the semis, have now been supplanted by the Crusaders and look set to miss out after dropping three of their last four games. Even a bonus point win over the Bulls may not be enough to make the semi finals if other results do not go their way.

This year’s title race could be decided by bonus points, although the current top four do have their own destinies in hand. Bonus point wins to the Crusaders and Hurricanes, which are very achievable, will see them secure their semi final places, while the Chiefs and Bulls can make the semi finals even if they lose their finals game, but that would require other results to go in their favour.

The other thing that I find interesting is this is the first time all season that both ranking models have agreed on all seven results.

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With just one week to go in the round robin of Super 14 and it’s time for to once again compare my rankings to those publish by the Herald on Sunday. Once again, I may have to cut the Herald some slack due to publishing deadlines, it’s entirely possible this column was published before the last three games of the round from South Africa. Then again, I suppose that’s one of the disadvantages of traditional media.

Sports After Dark
Power Ranking
Herald on Sunday
Chiefs
66.38
Chiefs
Hurricanes
66.25
Sharks
Bulls
65.28
Hurricanes
Sharks
57.94
Bulls
Waratahs
55.72
Crusaders
Crusaders
54.46
Brumbies
Brumbies
52.73
Waratahs
Force
49.5
Force
Blues
36.02
Lions
Highlanders
35.1
Blues
Stormers
34.25
Stormers
Lions
19.63
Highlanders
Reds
13.83
Reds
Cheetahs
11.03
Cheetahs

Strangely we agree on the top four, although not in the same order. However, I question the ranking of the Sharks at two, this is a team who seem to be fading fast with just one win from their last four outings and face the table topping Bulls in what is a virtual quarter final in the last week of the round robin. I tend to think fourth, which is where I have them, is a much better spot.

Other than the Sharks, it’s hard to argue with any of the other rankings, but we’ve both had 13 weeks and 84 games to figure it out. Glad to see we both got there in the end.

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Last week I published an article containing how my two ranking models were predicting who would make the semi finals. The answer was resoundingly the Hurricanes, Bulls and Chiefs, with either the Sharks or Force rounding out the top four. Another week has gone by, the models have been fed more data and with just two weeks to go, here’s how they are predicting the table to finish.

Sports After Dark
Hurricanes 47
Bulls 45
Chiefs 41
Crusaders 40
Sharks 39
Force 37
Waratahs 36
Brumbies 36
Blues 31
Highlanders 27
Stormers 23
Lions 19
Reds 18
Cheetahs 12
Hollinger
Hurricanes 47
Bulls 45
Chiefs 41
Crusaders 40
Sharks 39
Force 37
Waratahs 36
Blues 35
Brumbies 32
Highlanders 27
Stormers 23
Lions 19
Reds 18
Cheetahs 12

Both tables are now virtually identical, with the only result the models disagree on being the Brumbies v Blues game this weekend. As neither of the models takes bonus points into account, there could be a little shuffling, but given their various runs home, I am now officially endorsing the top four predicted by these models as the way the Super 14 will finish. That sees the Bulls facing the Chiefs in Pretoria and the Hurricanes facing the Crusaders in Wellington as your semi finalist.

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In my continuing series about how the subjective Herald on Sunday rankings are not all that flash and have an obviously pro-Auckland bias, I present to you this week’s exhibit.

Sports After Dark
PR
NZ Herald
Hurricanes
69.36
Hurricanes
Bulls
62.91
Sharks
Chiefs
62.79
Chiefs
Sharks
60.46
Bulls
Waratahs
52.87
Crusaders
Force
51.73
Waratahs
Crusaders
49.93
Blues
Brumbies
47.85
Force
Blues
40.34
Brumbies
Highlanders
37.48
Stormers
Stormers
31.18
Lions
Reds
17.34
Reds
Lions
16.31
Highlanders
Cheetahs
12.64
Cheetahs

What’s interesting here is the Blues still being ranked higher than their current form would suggest, and let’s not forget that the Blues’ downfall was predicted two weeks ago on Inside the Numbers. The Sharks just four places, according to the Herald, after being a lacklustre Highlanders team in a game that was very hard on the eyes. In defence of the Herald, they probably had to go to press before this game was played.

The other ranking that baffles me is the Crusaders who, despite winning, move down two places. After picking up a crutial bonus point, they now appear poised for a run at the semi finals, particularly as some of the teams above them are yet to play each other. Then there was this little quip:

What is it about our blinkered rugby psyche that makes us believe the Crusaders are admirable for the way they grind out victories this season, yet the Waratahs are committing weekly crimes against rugby? Could it be the same reason the rest of the rugby world thinks we’re arrogant so-and-sos?

Nobody is claiming the Crusaders have set the world on fire this season, but the fact remains the Crusaders have been close to fulfilling their promise while the Waratahs have gotten more and more inept at the season has gone on. But then again, this is just more of the Herald’s pro-Auckland bias…

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