#swfc have 9 matches left to complete an unlikely relegation escape.
In the thread below, a look at the historical context of what a Great Escape would look like.
The points won by teams at the bottom of this season's Championship are tracking a typical season quite closely:
In general teams at the bottom improve their form more in the last 9 matches than teams further up the table, so we shouldn't assume the helping hand of a collapse by the teams above us:
The variation is quite big, though, and the most a team in 22nd after 37 matches ever won in the final 9 matches was 18 points. The same as the typical team in 1st:
7 out of 10 teams already in the bottom 3 by matchday 37 also finished there
In 5 of the last 22 seasons the team in 23rd after 37 matches managed to survive:
Only once, however, have a team managed to bridge a gap of 6 points or more after 37 matches to ultimately survive: Barnsley last season, when they won 15 points in the last 7 to pip Charlton and Wigan to survival despite trailing by 7 at this point of the season:
Wednesday's toil in getting out of the bottom three, despite the November boost of a halving of the points deduction, is clear to see in this chart:
If we do a very simple "prediction" of the final table, and put a ruler under the current points trajectory and extend the line to 46 matches, 21st will require 47 points.
It doesn't change the standings massively if we use the form of the last 8 matches instead (46 points):
That's obviously too basic. The fixture schedule of the teams at the bottom will play a significant part too.
@FiveThirtyEight have a "Soccer Power Index" (SPI), which measures the strength of 640+ teams and which are used for simulations of the remaining matches in their model.
The SPI of a team goes up and down depending on whether they perform as expected against an opponent or not. A bit like the rating system in chess.
How does it look in this season's Championship then? The quirk is the season start rating weighs a team's @TMuk_news value too:
How, then, is the strength of opponents, measured using that SPI rating, in the remaining matches on average?
Birmingham's schedule is a tad harder than ours, while Rotherham's and Coventry's are a bit easier.
The final table in @FiveThirtyEight's model looks like this - not much change, then, but it's perhaps also a conservative model predicting close results and thus not much in it in the way of expected points from the remainder for all teams:
A simple projection says 46-47 points and 47-48 points if you take into account teams in 21st after 37 matches tend to win points at a higher rate in the remaining 9 matches.
Survival target: 46-49 points.
We need to win another 14-17 points.
We have 5 home games and 4 away games remaining in which to do so.
Ranked by difficulty using the @FiveThirtyEight's model we're looking at home games Bristol City, Forest, Blackburn as must wins and then another 2-3 wins/5-8 points from home games Swansea+Cardiff and away games at Derby, QPR, Boro and Watford.
Damn hard, but not impossible.
Finally a plug for my Ko-fi if you're thus inclined and want to give a virtual pat on the back:
Ainsworthing blew up in Ipswich’s faces second half when the game was there to be shut down by pouncing on our disarray. Seemed like an attempt to protect the lead that went wrong and a bit of wilting in a hostile atmosphere?
Very impressed by how regimented and disciplined Ipswich were particularly first half on and off the ball. Made us look second rate, and it definitely felt like A Plan was beating A Vibes Team, and justly so.
Even then it was two huge mistakes by Iorfa, when under little to no pressure, that meant they leave Sheffield with a point.
#swfc I really, earnestly hoped this was the time I'd read a Chansiri interview and it'd be different. Alas no. Petulance and an unwillingness to learn. And still without much idea what a Wednesdayite is, how we think [thread]
The petulance on show: “'When something good happens it’s because I have supposedly taken a step back. When it’s not good, then it’s my fault'” and "The chairman offered an answer that suggested he felt he was going to be hit with negativity not matter what he did". 2/26
How is trust created? By people being trustworthy. When are people trustworthy? When we're vulnerable, like when we own up, in earnest, to having made a mistake.
#swfc I can see from @DomHowson's player ratings that him and eye did not see the game the same way at all, so I should probably have a longer think and calm down a bit, but writing relieves stress, so here goes:
Created our own downfall once again. 1/37
What on earth have we been doing on the training pitch for three weeks for these players to look MORE like strangers to each other than they did before the international break? 2/37
We're so, so easy to defend against if you shut down the wings as there are no central runs from midfield.
Notice how the penalty came about from Shodipo staying inside making a darting run in behind. 3/37
#swfc What a frustrating half of football. All blood and thunder from the start, blowing Shrewsbury out backwards in the opening quarter of the game, but, quite inexplicably, we've let them a poor Shrewsbury - calamitous in defence - back into the game and it's one all at HT 1/11
Shodipo tore Shrewsbury a new one down our left going either side of their sorry full back time and again and also drifting in centrally from where he won the penalty. 2/11
He also won the corner we scored from, Berahino allowed to step into the ball almost unchallenged to score. 3/11
#swfc Good things: There should be no doubt for these players that this sort of comatose laurel-resting, "big club going away to a lower league ground" sort of non-performance will see us crucified time and again, especially in this league, which has plenty of quality this year.
By some distance the worst we've been this season and at no point of the game did we have much of a handle on it. It looked like we were only seeing Plymouth's passes and movement 1-2 seconds after they were made and only then did we react to them.
We were so easy to play against: No organised pressure on their player in possession, so Plymouth given time to have player drop deep for the wall pass, swivel and run in behind onto a through ball from the first player.
#swfc Probably our worst half of the season so far. Plymouth showing everything we haven't: Tenacity, invention, movement, fluidity, connecting passes. (thread)
Plymouth have taken a leaf out of Rotherham's book and strangled our rythm by marking/pressing high when BPF is on the ball ready to distribute. I expect to see plenty more teams do the same against us considering how successful Plymouth (and R'ham) have been doing so.
There's a weird sense of passivity and lack of energy to us today. Byers, Wing have been bystanders too often and not adept at picking up the runs Plymouth make from central areas towards the sides that have been a simple, yet effective way to open us up time and again.