Brigantine
Bench Player
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That's an important part of it yes. New Zealand's rise up until 31 Oct 2016 was limited by the weakness of the teams they play regularly. They were 11.24 RP ahead of the 2nd TRC team, so even winning by 15+ away from home would only earn them 0.26 additional RP. (and no gains at home or neutral venues). No matter how far ahead you are in reality, you need somewhat competitive games in order to prove it.Wales and and New Zealand have the relative rise and fall of NH and SH rugby respectively to thank for the current positions. With the rise of Ireland and England, Wales has gotten more rank points for beating them. With the decline of Aus and SA down the rankings comparatively, a loss or a draw to these teams really hurts NZ in ranking points. Without the hiding Aus have NZ in Perth, they would still be No1. In spite of all of Wales rightful success.
Yes, NH has been rising and SH falling since RWC 2015. And yes that flows through to the points Wales and New Zealand can earn/lose for a given match outcome.
But they also earned it too. Wales won the 6N GS *despite* Ireland and England being as strong as they were, and that's impressive. New Zealand came 3rd in the Tri-Nations *despite* South Africa and Australia being where they are.
It's perfectly appropriate that you gain more for achieving something more impressive.
If Wales had lost to Ireland in the 6N this year, it would be Ireland in the #1 spot right now
And quite right, if New Zealand had had a better season, they would have been ranked higher. And yes, the fact it happened like this *now* when 2 other countries were snapping at their heels in the rankings is a big element of luck. If it had happened in 2016 instead they would have gotten away with it. And people might still not have noticed that the All Blacks dropped a whole 5 RP since the heyday back then. (and that's not counting the 2019 loss)
I wonder if you're familiar with the nuances of how the current ranking system works... I'll clarify this point anyway:The rank weighting's based on relative position is I think flawed more so now than perhaps in the past. In the past the difference between 1 and 6, was a gulf, now, any top 6-7team could arguably win against another top team. The relative gap is smaller now but the weighting for a win or loss is the same. I think that is not reflective on the level-ness of the top teams.
Essentially you get 1 point for winning (and -1 for losing), on top of 10% of the current *rankings points* difference for playing a higher team.
The formulas don't care what ranks teams are in on the table, only how big the relative gap is between them. This is all before any weighting is applied.
Think about it this way - Wales gains 0.64 RP in that chart. That's made up of 1.00 gained for winning, and 0.36 lost for playing against Scotland who is 3.56 rankings points below them (after factoring in home advantage).
That 3.56 rankings points might translate to 1 rank in the table, or 6 ranks if there are lots of teams clustered in between. 10% of 3.56 is still 0.36.
[the rest of the explanation here]
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