thewwfc
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2015
- Messages
- 2,113
- Reaction score
- 618
- Points
- 113
- Supports
- Wycombe
Let's get this party started then.
In one of the weakest third tier contests in recent memory, the one thing you can say is whoever's for the drop this season is really going to deserve it, with this amount of entirely beatable mediocre to crap teams in the division.
For the sake of argument, I'm going to include the full bottom half of the table, but realistically I'd say only those from Cambridge on down are still in this.
For Reading on up, it's pretty damn tight and one win can send you shooting several positions up the table - plus there's games in hand complicating matters.
So to keep it objective, let's check out points per game as well. The columns, in order, are:
This probably doesn't tell us anything we don't already know, other than Reading are better than their position implies (given the points deduction, not that surprising).
Sobering reading for Charlton fans, but you'd imagine that the appointment of Jones will be enough to steer them to safety.
Right now I feel like we've got just about enough about us to scrape through this season, but I'm taking nothing for granted given that Franchise went down with a top-half budget, and Oxford skirted alarmingly close to doing the same.
Yeah, we won yesterday, but have a shocking set of Feb fixtures and could easily be in the drop zone at the end of the month.
I can't see the current bottom 3 beating the drop to be honest, they're a bit adrift and would have to find promotion form from somewhere to even get up to safety right now - which seems pretty unlikely on current form, and I don't think any of those sides has suddenly signed a saviour in the transfer window.
But you never know, there could still be a side that drops like a stone for whatever reason. At the very least, 21st is still very much up for grabs, with a generous swathe of contenders.
In one of the weakest third tier contests in recent memory, the one thing you can say is whoever's for the drop this season is really going to deserve it, with this amount of entirely beatable mediocre to crap teams in the division.
For the sake of argument, I'm going to include the full bottom half of the table, but realistically I'd say only those from Cambridge on down are still in this.
For Reading on up, it's pretty damn tight and one win can send you shooting several positions up the table - plus there's games in hand complicating matters.
So to keep it objective, let's check out points per game as well. The columns, in order, are:
P | W | D | L | F | A | +/- | Pts |
---|
This probably doesn't tell us anything we don't already know, other than Reading are better than their position implies (given the points deduction, not that surprising).
Sobering reading for Charlton fans, but you'd imagine that the appointment of Jones will be enough to steer them to safety.
Right now I feel like we've got just about enough about us to scrape through this season, but I'm taking nothing for granted given that Franchise went down with a top-half budget, and Oxford skirted alarmingly close to doing the same.
Yeah, we won yesterday, but have a shocking set of Feb fixtures and could easily be in the drop zone at the end of the month.
I can't see the current bottom 3 beating the drop to be honest, they're a bit adrift and would have to find promotion form from somewhere to even get up to safety right now - which seems pretty unlikely on current form, and I don't think any of those sides has suddenly signed a saviour in the transfer window.
But you never know, there could still be a side that drops like a stone for whatever reason. At the very least, 21st is still very much up for grabs, with a generous swathe of contenders.