With the Steelers having a late bye this year, I became interested in how teams with byes late in the season have done in the playoffs. I figured I might as well post what I found here.
I went back to 2002 and looked at how many teams with a bye on week 9 or later did in terms winning the SB.
Teams with late byes have won the SB in 4 of the 9 years I looked at. But assuming late byes had no impact on a team's chances of winning the SB. the expected collective win share of teams with late byes would be about 2.37 SBs.
Thinking there might have been some sort of selection bias, I checked if there were more late bye teams than would be mathematically expected making the playoffs. In fact, slightly fewer teams than expected actually make the playoffs (23 actuals vs. 25.5 expected).
So (mathematically speaking) it appears there might be a slight edge in terms of winning the SB for teams that have byes late in the season. Then again, this could be statistical noise due to a small sample size (one would need to look at data over a couple decades to really 'prove' something like this).
I went back to 2002 and looked at how many teams with a bye on week 9 or later did in terms winning the SB.
Teams with late byes have won the SB in 4 of the 9 years I looked at. But assuming late byes had no impact on a team's chances of winning the SB. the expected collective win share of teams with late byes would be about 2.37 SBs.
Thinking there might have been some sort of selection bias, I checked if there were more late bye teams than would be mathematically expected making the playoffs. In fact, slightly fewer teams than expected actually make the playoffs (23 actuals vs. 25.5 expected).
So (mathematically speaking) it appears there might be a slight edge in terms of winning the SB for teams that have byes late in the season. Then again, this could be statistical noise due to a small sample size (one would need to look at data over a couple decades to really 'prove' something like this).
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