redandblack wrote:West, Port and North were expected to finish below Glenelg, so there goes 3 of your points to start with.
Here's what I said in relation to the SANFL participants:
"Extend the claim with the clause " ... and participating SANFL teams weren't affected in their goal of finals participation", then 8 facts out of 9 support the claim."So the three points stand.
The whole argument with the Foxtel Cup is that it harms side's premiership chances. Well, that has been proven wrong, regardless of results of teams that finished 7th the year before.
Proven wrong only by considering the results of one team, and generalising to the rest of the teams. Fallacious reasoning.
As for West, we won both games after the Cup matches and our season went backward after the game we won at Prospect when we were hit by injury and suspensions.
I respect your assessment of West Adelaide's season.
Whatever contortions your argument develops, the fact is that two of te competing teams made the Grand Final and one won a premiership, so the argument that it affects your premiership chnaces is just silly

The point under contention is the claim that it
doesn't affect premiership chances - in the general case. Had you claimed "it didn't affect Claremont's premiership chances" then you'd have been correct. Participation may well have affected Claremont anyway, but evidently not enough to preclude the premiership. Rather, you claimed "Claremont won the flag, so participation in Foxtel Cup didn't affect the chances of the WAFL/VFL teams", which is clearly ridiculous.
I do not claim that Foxtel Cup participation neccessarily prevents all participants from winning their domestic comps; that would be as irrational as the argument that it doesn't. I suggest that there is potential for it (in its current format) to affect a team's domestic season. It is therefore valid for SANFL clubs with aspirations to a premiership (or other lesser goals) to offer this as a reason to decline the invitation.