- Aug 18, 2009
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- AFL Club
- Richmond
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- #2,251
The article was written in mid-2016, when as I'm sure you recall Hawthorn were on a much-feared quest for their fourth straight flag. The Hawks weren't playing especially well, but they did keep flopping over the line in close games. So the common wisdom emerged that "good teams win the close ones," to fit the narrative that Hawthorn were actually much better than their results suggested.In that attachment any reason why hawks 2016 is noted?
As the article points out, this isn't great logic considering that the year before, Hawthorn only won 1 out of 5 close games. If good teams win the close ones, why did the threepeat Hawks of 2015 keep dropping them? And indeed, all teams tend to reliably and quickly revert to the mean after having an unusually good or poor return from a season of close games, which strongly suggests that there's a lot of luck and random variation involved.
edit: This is actually a good retrospective read from mid-2016... an article telling us to ignore all the stats that suggested Hawthorn were diminished, because the club's culture and coaching were so good they defied statistics. This did not turn out to be the case.
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