The Broncos do not deserve to be in the finals, but they'll still be there next week

By Ben Lewis / Roar Pro

Yes, you read the first half of the headline correctly. The Brisbane Broncos do not deserve to be playing finals football in 2019.

I have no doubt that many of you, especially those north of the border, will wholeheartedly disagree. The Broncos finished in eighth position, one point clear of the ninth (Wests Tigers) and tenth (Penrith Panthers)-placed sides, so how can they possibly not be deserving of playing finals?

Simple. A top-eight finals system has the potential to reward mediocrity. To be blunt, the Broncos are the most undeserving team of a finals position in over a decade. They finished 2019 with 25 points and a points differential of -57.

This is the worst performance of a finals bound team since 2007, when the Broncos again scraped through with 24 points and a differential of +35, enough to consign the Wests Tigers to a ninth-placed finish. Wow, the more things change, right?

Breaking down the Broncos’ 2019 season further, they finished with eleven wins, twelve losses, and one surprising draw against the Warriors. Their record against other top eight teams was five wins and seven losses. Considering their usual standard of success and the proud history of the club, this season will not be looked back upon fondly by the Broncos.

I am not saying that the top eight system is always going to produce undeserving finalists. You only need to look at last season, where the difference between first and eighth place was a grand total of two points. It would have been unfair to exclude any of those teams, given how close the top eight became.

(AAP Image/Dan Peled)

All four qualifying finalists finished on 34 points, while all four elimination finalists finished on 32 points; that’s six points clear of the ninth-placed Tigers, a position on the ladder they may well own through squatter’s rights at this point.

Several pundits have called for a reduction in the number of teams in the finals, however this would bring on a completely different set of problems.

These would include an increase in the amount of dead rubbers in the last few rounds of the regular season and the loss of revenue and crowds in the finals by reducing the amount of games played.

A top five or top six finals system is simply not realistic. Unfortunately, I found that out the hard way by coining an article back in 2015 that argued for a top six system. It was ill-timed, not well thought out and written poorly. It consequently received heavy criticism, and deservedly so.

That notwithstanding, there is also an interesting history of relative success for teams in eighth spot. Twice since 1999 has eighth made it all the way to the grand final, namely the Eels in 2009 and the Cowboys in 2017.

Both teams finished the season with more wins than losses and a positive points differential, both came into the finals with great momentum and both teams captivated the NRL with their style of play.

Unfortunately, neither team tasted success in the big dance, as both teams had their dreams crushed by a dominant Melbourne, fairly or otherwise.

Jason Taumalolo with the Cowboys. (Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)

So, while I am not saying that the team finishing eighth is always undeserving of their shot and there to just make up the numbers every year, I am most definitely saying that Brisbane should have enjoyed their Mad Monday four days ago. No team that finishes with less wins than losses should be playing at the business end of the year.

Now I hear you asking me why I care so much. Why do I care that the Broncos scraped through? What difference does it make? They finished high enough to play finals according to the rules of the competition, so why do I have such an issue with it?

Because there is a very real chance that the Brisbane Broncos will be playing the loser of Canberra and Melbourne next weekend.

The overwhelming majority of pundits seem to be predicting a Parramatta victory at Bankwest on Sunday afternoon and as desperately as this Parra fan wants to agree with them – and taste our first finals victory in ten years – there is a horribly apprehensive feeling in my gut.

The bottom line is Parramatta have overachieved this season. They were the beneficiaries of a very helpful draw and finished in fifth position with a five-five split of wins and losses against teams in the top eight, including a dreadful 10-64 loss against Melbourne in a Not Very Magic Round.

While they did salvage some momentum by leapfrogging Manly into fifth position thanks to a comfortable win at Bankwest in the last round, they could have easily finished fourth. The equation was simple: win the last three games and they finish in fourth spot.

What happened? They capitulated horribly against the Bulldogs, and then put in a rather dismal effort against the Broncos to quickly extinguish any hope of a double chance in 2019.

The Broncos. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Adding to my apprehension is the fact that the Eels seem to handle pressure about as well as the Challenger Space Shuttle. In 2017 we finished in fourth position and had fans daring to dream about another blockbuster preliminary final and potentially even another shot at the big one. What happened? Bang, bang. We lost against the Storm and the Cowboys and that was us done in straight sets.

It appears the Eels can only truly succeed when there are no expectations for them to do so. Our 2009 fairytale was more enjoyable because nobody expected us to make it as far as we did. There was no pressure on us whatsoever. Contrast that to their performances when actually grappling with expectation.

In 1998 the Eels finished fourth and battled their way to a preliminary final against the ninth-placed Canterbury, in one of the more bizarre finals systems ever seen.

They were up 18-2 with 11 minutes to go and a grand final beckoned. All they had to do was hold on for the last 11 minutes against a Craig Polla-Mounter-led Bulldogs and they would face the Broncos in the decider, who they had defeated 15-10 the week before. The Bulldogs won 32-20 after extra time.

In 2001 they blew through the season and made the grand final that many tipped them to win. A 0-24 halftime score against Newcastle put paid to that. In 2005 they again smashed the regular season in a record-setting performance. All we had to do was brush aside the Cowboys and we would get another crack at premiership glory. 0-29 at fulltime and the Cowboys went on to lose to the Tigers.

All the pressure is on Parramatta on Sunday. The pressure is on Parramatta to finally break their finals victory drought, the pressure is on Mitchell Moses to prove that he is not the overrated half many thought he was, the pressure is on Brad Arthur to keep the board’s faith in him, and the pressure is on the entire squad to avoid another weak exit from the finals.

Brad Arthur tries to squint the pain away. (AAP Image/Brendan Esposito)

That is precisely why a large part of me is predicting the vast majority of the sell-out crowd on Sunday will be leaving disappointed. If that does indeed happen, it will sting all the more because we were eliminated from the premiership race by a team that did not even deserve to be there in the first place.

The Crowd Says:

2019-09-20T03:49:06+00:00

#Longstone

Roar Rookie


"The bottom line is Parramatta have overachieved this season" yes they did by overscoring 58-0. haha Broncos got Rammed pretty bad.

2019-09-16T06:46:04+00:00

Malo

Guest


NOSTRADAMUS- 58-0

2019-09-15T08:35:43+00:00

terrance

Guest


Strange? Yes. Pathetic? Yes. ''Roar Pro''? Yes. The usual trifecta.

2019-09-15T08:13:05+00:00

terrance

Guest


Fraser, your assessment was a lot better than the author of the article, another ''Roar Pro'' with NFI. Bronco's have been poor away from home all year, that was boys led by "Darius'' led to the slaughter. Not a bad effort for a guy earning circa $17.5k a week, $2.5k a day, everyday for the next two years. The two QLD teams this week both lost.

2019-09-15T02:00:24+00:00

Papi Smurf

Roar Rookie


The Broncos were the ONLY team to stumble into the top 8 with a NEGATIVE points differential. That speaks volumes! Not just for the Broncos substandard performance this year but also regarding the credentials of their much hyped and overrated coach.

2019-09-15T01:35:54+00:00

Big Daddy

Guest


As last night's matches proved anything can happen. Parramatta by finishing 5th and having the advantage of the home crowd should win. If Broncos play anywhere near their best could go either way.

2019-09-14T12:08:34+00:00

terrance

Guest


Correct. The fact it is not a Friday night game, or a night game and its being away from Brisbane, the home team should be favoured.

2019-09-14T08:20:04+00:00

Peter

Guest


So your article amounts to “Waa waa nofair the Broncos might beat my beloved team!” As I’ve had more than one Eels supporter say to me this season, “Suck it up, sunshine!”

2019-09-14T07:59:51+00:00

Gray-Hand

Roar Rookie


Worth pointing out that of those 12 games the broncos played against top 8 sides - 6 of them were against the Storm Roosters and Souths. The Eels by comparison only played 10 games against top echelon got sides and only 3 were against the top 3 teams. The Eels finished on 30 competition points and the Broncos finished on 25. Swap out 2 of the Broncos games against the Roosters and Melbourne for 2 teams outside the 8 that The Eels played twice, and the Broncos probably finish above the Eels on the ladder.

2019-09-14T06:00:23+00:00

James

Guest


Exactly, you can use the win/loss ratio against top 8 teams quoted in this article (5/12 Broncos, 5/10 Eels) to recognise the Broncos had a harder draw than the Eels did. But somehow that makes them less deserving of the finals....

2019-09-14T05:54:33+00:00

Gray-Hand

Roar Rookie


Maybe one less game against The Storm, Souths or Roosters and one more game against, say Penrith? Pretty good chance of turning a likely loss to a likely win

2019-09-14T05:51:44+00:00

Steveo

Guest


Strange article...if you're saying the Broncs are so bad they don't deserve to be in the finals, then the Eels, should have no problem beating them in this game. If the Broncs do happen to beat a team that is so much more deserving of being in the finals, wouldn't that invalidate your point?

2019-09-14T03:46:19+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


You got beaten by the Tigers Knights Dragons and Titans this year. How much easier did it need to be ?

2019-09-14T01:22:17+00:00

ken gargett

Guest


as a one-eyed broncos fan from day one, may i say, i completely agree. they have largely been poor this year. at times, abysmal. one of the lesser teams that the broncs have ever fielded. but that is the system and if any of the other 8 teams had been less poor, we would not be there. there is massive talent and potential, especially in the pack, but it must be time for darius to back out at year's end and not riski damaging his legacy. agree also with fraser, we desperately need to sort out the spine. any game-managing halfback wanting to work behind what is likely to be the best pack in the comp very soon, come on board. as for beating the eels, i think we are finals fodder but i hope i'm wrong.

2019-09-14T00:42:05+00:00

Gray-Hand

Roar Rookie


The premise that a team doesn’t deserve to play finals football if they have more losses than wins isn’t really valid when every team has a different draw. The Broncos had one of the toughest draws this year. If they had the benefit of an average draw, they probably would have ended up with a positive win/loss ratio.

2019-09-13T21:09:47+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


Could be an epic encounter this one. If in doubt you have to favor the home team to win.

2019-09-13T19:02:51+00:00

Fraser

Roar Rookie


As a Broncos fan, I will happily acknowledge this is not a good team. They are playing with what is probably the least dynamic and creative spine in the competition, with: -A back-up hooker playing halfback -A busted fullback playing five-eighth -A tackling machine at hooker who doesn't offer much attacking spark -A fullback / five-eighth playing fullback who doesn't know how to control a game of footy. However, they absolutely deserve to be in the finals by virtue of being the least worst of the other 8 teams in the competition. Are they the worst team in the Top 8? Definitely. But they scraped in and now have a chance to at least make a game of it.

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