I've devised an alternative super league table in an attempt to more accurately predict a teams final position better than the actual super league table by recognising that some teams are 'better' than others.
I've done this by separating the teams into two groups. Group A teams I would regard as the top sides in the league which are highly likely to get a play off spot. Group B teams are the other sides which will be scrapping it out for the last couple of play off spots.
Group A is Warrington, Wigan, Saints, Leeds, Huddersfield, Catalans
Group B is Bradford, Castleford, Wakefield, Salford, Hull FC, Hull KR, London, Widnes
The scoring works like this: every point a team wins against a group A team gets added to their score (+2 for a win, +1 for a draw). Against a group B team, they lose points (-1 for a draw, -2 for a loss). Finally group A teams start with a score of 2, group B teams start with a score of -2 (this is because group A teams play less games against other group A teams than group B teams do because they don't play themselves, and vice versa).
Why is this better than the normal table? Because if for example, with 3 games to go, team A is in 8th place and team B is in 9th place in the real table, but team A's final three games are Wigan, St Helens, Leeds whereas team B's final three games are Widnes, Wakefield, Salford the alternate table would show team B higher than team A.
For Bradford, the aim is to achieve a score of 0 or more to be pretty sure of getting a playoff spot.
The table as it stands:
