Whatever happens over the next two weeks, we're probably going to see an NRL drought broken

By Andrew Ferguson / Expert

The past decade has been arguably the closest in the entire 112-year history of top-level rugby league in Australia.

All 16 teams have appeared in at least two finals series while ten have made their way to the grand final. Seven different teams have won a premiership.

And with the NRL grand final for 2019 only a few weeks away, focus is solely on who will reach the last day of the season. One thing that is assured thanks to the first week of the finals, we won’t have a repeat of last year’s decider, with Canberra now a chance of advancing to their first grand final since their last premiership back in 1994.

Looking at the last decade of football (2010-19), all nine of the premiership-winning teams ended the regular season in the top three on the ladder. On eight of those occasions, the premiers were undefeated in the finals, winning in Week 1, earning a week off and then winning their preliminary and then grand finals.

The last time a team from outside the top three won the grand final was Melbourne’s non-cap compliant side of 2009. The last time prior to that was the Wests Tigers in 2005, who won from fourth place.

One thing that has only happened five times, and not once since the ’05 Tigers, is a premiership side winning four finals matches.

Recent history tells us loud and clear that you can only win a maximum of three finals games in any one campaign, even if you have an illegally constructed squad.

These stats alone state loud and clear that this is a race between Melbourne, Sydney and Souths.

Given that eight of the last nine premiers all had a win in Week 1 and Week 2 off, recent history suggests that Melbourne and Souths have very slim chances of winning the title, leaving just the Roosters, who would claim the first back-to-back title wins since Brisbane in either 1992-93 (when the competition was unified, or 1997-98, when they won the Super League title and the first premiership under the unified NRL competition).

Week 1 of the finals has seen every team bar the Warriors record a win since 2010. Penrith’s 80 per cent success rate in Week 1 is the highest, followed by Canberra’s three-quarter clip.

Prior to last Saturday’s win over the Eels, the Melbourne Storm were one of five teams who hadn’t tasted victory in Week 2. Their previous win in the second week came in 2008, with 1999 the last time they did it when cap compliant.

Parramatta still don’t have a recent Week 2 win, and the same goes for the Panthers and Dragons. The Titans haven’t been seen in semi-final week since their 27-2 loss to the Eels in 2009.

It was that win by the Jarryd Hayne-led side against Gold Coast which saw Parramatta make their last preliminary finals appearance. They are the only side that hasn’t appeared in a Week 3 finals game since 2010, while the Raiders, Titans, Knights, Eels, Panthers and Tigers have only tasted failure in the grand final qualifier in that time.

Melbourne have won more Week 3 finals than any other side, with four victories at an impressive 66.67 per cent. The Roosters, like Melbourne, have made six of a possible nine prelims 3, however they’ve won half their matches.

Then we get to the grand final. Souths, Dragons and Cronulla all won their sole appearance in the biggest match of the year, while the Roosters have won two of their three over the decade. Melbourne have won premierships in half of their four appearances.

Since 2010, 15 of the 18 grand finalists all won in Week 1. Twelve of the 18 teams to make it to the decider also received the second week off after winning their opening final.

Statistically, we can conclude that this year’s grand final will be between Canberra and the Roosters.

While a lot of these figures suggest the Roosters will go on to win, it’s worth noting the power of the drought-breaker.

St George Illawarra handed the joint venture club their first premiership in 2010, the first for St George or Illawarra since the Dragons won back in 1979.

In 2014, Souths won their first title since 1971, while North Queensland and Cronulla won their maiden titles the following two years.

The Raiders are the only club still standing with a long premiership drought, their last title coming in 1994.

So come October, the statistics and recent history suggest that we could see a premiership drought of some kind broken.

It could also mean Cooper Cronk has the chance to win three titles in consecutive seasons for the first time since a swag of Parramatta players achieved the feat in 1981, 1982 and 1983.

The Crowd Says:

2019-09-27T08:54:42+00:00

Nick

Roar Guru


Probably could argue the Gold Coast have the longest drought, if you consider all the prior iterations of spectacular flops of teams up there since 1988. The Giants, Seagulls, Chargers...

2019-09-26T13:08:46+00:00

terrance

Guest


Hi Fergy, Once again, an interesting statistical analysis, but once again you have not taken into account the now respected well resrected and important variable (amongst other minor variables), the "MSSCOTSC variable". Yes the Melbourne Storm Systematic Cheating Of The Salary Cap variable that damages statistical data between the known dates of 2006 to 2010, though many expect the "MSSCOTSC variable" may have started prior to this. Potentially 33% of your statistical analysis is extremely flawed (or floored!).

2019-09-26T11:21:31+00:00

Insider

Roar Rookie


Cry me an ocean, you could feed the desalination plant at port botany

2019-09-26T09:53:53+00:00

Ben Kerrison

Guest


A win in week one doesn't mean anything other than getting the value of having the next week of finals off , but it doesn't always work out as an advantage because we have seen teams become complacent and underestimate the teams that play in week 2 in the past.

2019-09-26T06:24:11+00:00

Papi Smurf

Roar Rookie


Melbourne’s non-cap compliant side of 2009... is that like the Roosters non-cap compliant sides of 2013, 2018 and 2019 Andrew? ;-)

2019-09-26T06:18:39+00:00

Beni Iniesta

Guest


Huh?

2019-09-26T02:57:36+00:00

maccaa62

Roar Rookie


That late try from Bateman meant all the pennies have landed for Canberra. They have the week off ( which they desperately needed) and drew the weaker side of the draw. It's now or never for the Raiders I feel they could easily smash Souths and go to the GF purring in high revs. There they will meet a beaten and bruised Roosters with not as much motivation or a similar Storm with mental scars from last time who need to be front runners to win.

2019-09-26T00:55:34+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


The stats show loud and clear that it's a three horse race and the Raiders aren't part of the race it seems. The stats show even more clearly that premiers haven't gone back to back in ages , I'm still wondering why that stat is of little value?

2019-09-26T00:34:24+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


To be fair, none of the stats are as cut and dried indicators as the prose suggests.

2019-09-25T21:42:00+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


Am I reading the post correctly when you say that the Raiders are little chance because they finished 4th but the Chickens are favorites if we ignore the back to back ''curse''? Why can't we ignore the ''curse'' of finishing 4th in that case which isn't nearly as strong?

2019-09-25T21:37:44+00:00

E-Meter

Roar Rookie


'A swag of Parramatta players'. Hang about...that was a symphony my friend. (Sorry just channeling Bill Lawry from the 12th Man).

2019-09-25T21:33:03+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Thanks Andrew. Fascinating what the trends tell us. I just want to clarify - Canberra’s 4th place sees them unlikely to win the GF, but their week 1 win means they’re odds on to make the GF. The Roosters are claiming the other GF based on recent history. So is it the back to back hoodoo or the fairytale drought breaker? The Roosters of course!

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