McIntyre Final Eight System

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The McIntyre Final Eight System was devised by Ken McIntyre in addition to the McIntyre Four, Five and Six systems. It is a playoff system of the top 8 finishers in a competition to determine which two teams will play in the Grand Final. The teams play each other over three weeks, with two teams eliminated each week. Teams who finish in a higher position in the competition are given an easier route to the Grand Final.

It is currently the finals series system used by the National Rugby League (since 1999); its first use was by the Australian Football League in 1994. However, starting from the 2000 season, the AFL replaced it with another top 8 system - the same one abandoned by the Australian Rugby League in 1996.

Contents

[edit] How it Works

Week 1

  • 1st Qualifying Final: 1st vs 8th
  • 2nd Qualifying Final: 2nd vs 7th
  • 3rd Qualifying Final: 3rd vs 6th
  • 4th Qualifying Final: 4th vs 5th

The teams are then ranked depending on whether they won or lost, then on their position on the ladder before the finals.

The two lowest ranked losers are eliminated from the finals, whilst the two highest ranked winners progress straight to Week 3.

Week 2

  • 1st Semi Final: 4th highest ranked winner vs 2nd highest ranked loser
  • 2nd Semi Final: 3rd highest ranked winner vs 1st highest ranked loser

The two losing teams are eliminated, the two winning teams progress to Week 3.

Week 3

  • 1st Preliminary Final: 2nd highest ranked winner (from Week 1) vs winner of 2nd Semi Final
  • 2nd Preliminary Final: 1st highest ranked winner (from Week 1) vs winner of 1st Semi Final

The two losing teams are eliminated, the two winning teams progress to Week Four.

Week 4

  • Grand Final: winner of 1st Preliminary Final vs winner of 2nd Preliminary Final

[edit] Criticisms

With its adoption by the NRL, debate again has arisen over its logic. The major problem many fans and media have with the system is that it allows the possibility for the teams that finish third and fourth on the ladder to be eliminated in the first week of the finals, although this has never happened in its history. Assuming that every team has an equal chance of winning each match there is a 37.5% chance of one or both of 3rd and 4th being eliminated the 1st round.

Another criticism was that, if first-week results go as planned, then first defeats eighth and second defeats seventh. This leaves the teams who finished from third to sixth effectively playing "dead rubbers" in the first week, with the results merely reshuffling the order of these four teams.

To clarify the second criticism, the AFL always scheduled the first round of the finals such that, in chronological order, the games were played: 4 vs 5, 3 vs 6, 2 vs 7, 1 vs 8. So, there was never the situation where two teams would play, knowing that their result would certainly not matter. However, if the final two games ultimately went as predicted, then the first two games again seem to retrospectively have little meaning.

[edit] Advantages

The major advantages of the system are that it provides the best chance that the top 2 teams after the regular season will meet in the grand final, and that no matches are repeated twice in the first three weeks.In fact, only twice since the NRL started using it (1999 - Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks; 2005 - Parramatta Eels) has the team finishing first failed to make the grand final.

When compared to other final eight systems, the McIntyre system allows for many more combinations of the eight teams in the grand final - with only two combinations (1v7 and 2v8) being completely impossible.

[edit] Competitions

In addition to the NRL, the McIntyre Final Eight System is also used in the Rugby League National League Three in Great Britain, the NSWRL Premier League and Jersey Flegg competitions.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links