So it seems that the two grand finalists did have a much better run with cumulative injuries, although Collingwood in the first half of the season did have a crisis among their average/decent talls. When Collingwood did have injuries they banked the wins, and surprisingly their losses came with basically a full list (fatigue of players pushing through a factor, maybe a heavy training load before finals?). Importantly their midfield rarely missed more than one player at a time. Just 4 times with 6 or more injuries, compared to 11 times for Geelong.
Brisbane were truly blessed throughout the year but then did pick up the unfortunate Payne and Ashcroft injuries before finals. Very rarely did they have in-game interruptions and in the back end of the year, injuries were more rotational rather than stacking up. Brisbane's win rate did drop to 50% on the few occassions they had 5 or more injuries. No times with 6 or more injuries!
Richmond were without Lynch (big) and Gibcus (less big) for most of the year and their season actually was somewhat derailed early due to a stack up of injuries. They had a huge correlation between win rate and having 4 or less injuries, even if they ran out of steam late in the season while relatively healthy. Still, having 6 or more injuries around 30% of the time compared to almost 50% for Geelong was a notable difference. When healthy, Geelong certainly had a stronger win rate than Richmond. 67-78% win rate when "healthy" compared to 50-64% for Richmond. Both sides lacked the depth to cover a big injury list with a win rate of 25-28% in those games.
Great work, some evidence to the theory that the difference between the premier and the wooden spoon winner could be as little as 8 of the wrong players being injured.
I guess the next thing to look at would be what were the cause of missing games.
Contact vs wear and tear caused by age or suboptimal preparation.
Is there relationship between age and games missed?