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The only advantage I can think of from having played more games is that having an extra midweek game might fatigue our rivals more (when you include the travel, where applicable) and also have a knock-on effect on their following Saturday game due to them having fewer rest/preparation days. Could this take away a fraction of the advantage of having games in hand? Might be clutching at straws though as it's all a bit intangible.FWIW we'll not have to wait long until the games played (mostly) level out....Tuesday 25th FebBromley v BradfordCheltenham v WalsallTuesday 11th MarchWimbledon v CheltenhamColchester v Port ValeGrimsby v Notts CountyTuesday 25th MarchPort Vale v BarrowMostly tough-looking games-in-hand for our promotion rivals on paper, so you never know. Cheltenham are in good form and have a big say, Colchester away is a tricky game-in-hand for Vale, as is Notts County's visit to Grimsby. Bradford have to go to Bromley who are no mugs, and Bradford's away record as previously highlighted is not great (W3, D6, L6).
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 22, 2025, 05:25:33 pmYou wanted it. Here it is. Although you probably won't like it....Remember, to save a lot of very tiresome arguing again, this is NOT predicting who will finish where. It's predicting how many points each final position will end up with. Nothing magic about it, but with a couple of exceptions, it's generally getting the finishing points tallies right to within a couple or 3 points for 15 years now.So, here's this evening's prediction.1st place: 902nd 893rd 884th 855th 856th 827th 758th 709th 6910th 65Bit of a bugger if that's anywhere near. It means we'd need to win 10 of our final 13 to make the top 3.88 points feels high for 3rd place, but there are a lot of teams with already slightly better ppg than us, and similar recent form. Personally, I think we are going to struggle to make the top 3, and this confirms it. We still don't and never have consistently looked like clearly one of the top three sides this season.If the third place team gets 88 points I’ll be genuinely amazed.
You wanted it. Here it is. Although you probably won't like it....Remember, to save a lot of very tiresome arguing again, this is NOT predicting who will finish where. It's predicting how many points each final position will end up with. Nothing magic about it, but with a couple of exceptions, it's generally getting the finishing points tallies right to within a couple or 3 points for 15 years now.So, here's this evening's prediction.1st place: 902nd 893rd 884th 855th 856th 827th 758th 709th 6910th 65Bit of a bugger if that's anywhere near. It means we'd need to win 10 of our final 13 to make the top 3.88 points feels high for 3rd place, but there are a lot of teams with already slightly better ppg than us, and similar recent form. Personally, I think we are going to struggle to make the top 3, and this confirms it. We still don't and never have consistently looked like clearly one of the top three sides this season.
Quote from: GazLaz on February 25, 2025, 09:48:56 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 22, 2025, 05:25:33 pmYou wanted it. Here it is. Although you probably won't like it....Remember, to save a lot of very tiresome arguing again, this is NOT predicting who will finish where. It's predicting how many points each final position will end up with. Nothing magic about it, but with a couple of exceptions, it's generally getting the finishing points tallies right to within a couple or 3 points for 15 years now.So, here's this evening's prediction.1st place: 902nd 893rd 884th 855th 856th 827th 758th 709th 6910th 65Bit of a bugger if that's anywhere near. It means we'd need to win 10 of our final 13 to make the top 3.88 points feels high for 3rd place, but there are a lot of teams with already slightly better ppg than us, and similar recent form. Personally, I think we are going to struggle to make the top 3, and this confirms it. We still don't and never have consistently looked like clearly one of the top three sides this season.If the third place team gets 88 points I’ll be genuinely amazed. I agree it does seem unfeasibly high. I'm just putting out what the model says. It's not a very sophisticated one, but it has been very close much more often than it's been wildly off the mark.
Has anyone checked other League 2 clubs to see if they’re discussing this topic
Walsall, Wimbledon, Notts County and us have been the best four teams in L2 since day one. No reason to think that won’t be the top 4 come the end of the season.
I am enjoying this excellent thread. As a person who has spent my life in Operations Research, and including much use of modelling and simulation, I would like to make a few comments – no negativity intended to anyone in any sense.First with regards to simple data, points-per-game (ppg) is probably the best way of comparing clubs’ performances that have already happened in a season – i.e. I am not talking about any predictions or guides to future performance. That is why ppg was used to adjudicate final positions in the aborted COVID season. It is simple, understandable, and consistent across all clubs. To go any deeper into e.g. current form, ranking of opposition left to play brings more complications and potentially loss of fairness/consistency/transparency.Then there is a wise old saying in the modelling and simulation community ‘all models are wrong, some are useful.’ Models, by definition, look at a subset of reality. Does that subset contain all the major driving factors? Sometimes it can be good to look in more detail, but also sometimes the possible benefit of adding more factors is not worth the effort required and can confuse more than illuminate.In this case, IMHO current form can add usefully to simple ppg for predictions. The ranking of opposition left is also possibly useful, but there is the question of whether to be ranked by table position or current form or some combination of both. Deeper analysts might wish to think about player availability (squad size, injuries and possible suspensions – how many players on a high number of yellows, quality of reserve players), past head-to-head data, do teams play well or badly against certain type teams/tactics, but IMHO that falls in the category of more work than benefit. Then there are always the things that can’t be modelled well – sheer luck with referee decisions, run of the ball, the effect of an early goal on teams, weather and playing conditions on the day. In this case, for us supporters, IMHO it is better to have a simple model and update and track it. BST’s model seems to do that, and IMHO is useful.
I suppose it would be possible to get a reasonably accurate prediction of how many points team positions would finish on if you took a look at the final league table over the last ten years and took an average from that.So how ever many points the top side ended with each year, added together and then divided by ten.Then the same again with second, third and fourth places etc.It might even give a more accurate guess at how the end of season points stacked up.
To get to 83 the currently third placed side would need 1.85 ppg.
Quote from: drfchound on February 25, 2025, 04:57:22 pmI suppose it would be possible to get a reasonably accurate prediction of how many points team positions would finish on if you took a look at the final league table over the last ten years and took an average from that.So how ever many points the top side ended with each year, added together and then divided by ten.Then the same again with second, third and fourth places etc.It might even give a more accurate guess at how the end of season points stacked up.Have put up the last 43 years stats (since 3 points per win introduced) earlier at reply #136 in this admittedly long thread Hound
Quote from: Chris Black come back on February 25, 2025, 05:31:27 pmTo get to 83 the currently third placed side would need 1.85 ppg.….and we need 1.923 ppg.
I find the ppg very telling . Despite rovers lge position , all 4 clubs directly below have a better ppg. With the points being so close and with em all having games in hand it’s no surprise I guess.Wombles, county and Bradford are all on 1.781ppg and PV are on 1.774. Whereas rovers are on 1.757. A win changes the score by around 0.05. So a win v Newport still only puts rovers on very similar ppg as the three teams directly below. A defeat for Bradford tonight will be a big boost. But they willThen be on exact same ppg as rovers.The gd has me concerned. It could make a big difference. It could be the diff between auto and playoffs .
Quote from: drfchound on February 25, 2025, 05:37:04 pmQuote from: Chris Black come back on February 25, 2025, 05:31:27 pmTo get to 83 the currently third placed side would need 1.85 ppg.….and we need 1.923 ppg.And if Wimbledon draw their game in hand they also would require 1.923ppg. If they lose their game in hand they would need 2ppg. If my Auntie had b*llocks.....
Whereas Walsall have only got 15 points from last 10 games, and we have got 21.
No stopping Bradford. That 25 points from the past 10 games since Cook got injured.
Either way we need to start playing more consistently better than we have done for most of this season,
Quote from: Chris Black come back on February 25, 2025, 04:50:24 pmEither way we need to start playing more consistently better than we have done for most of this season, Is winning 6 from 8 not a sign that we have seen an upturn?
Quote from: dickos1 on February 25, 2025, 11:18:56 pmWhereas Walsall have only got 15 points from last 10 games, and we have got 21. True. But context. They'd got 52 points from the first 23 games and we'd only got 37.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 25, 2025, 11:51:09 pmQuote from: dickos1 on February 25, 2025, 11:18:56 pmWhereas Walsall have only got 15 points from last 10 games, and we have got 21. True. But context. They'd got 52 points from the first 23 games and we'd only got 37.Of course which is why they’re so far clear, but since their striker went back to stoke their form has been midtable. Let’s hope it stays like that