29

May

Strength of Schedule

Repeat: Sydney Kings catch break in NBL27

Written By

Peter Brown

Senior Editor

Repeat: Sydney Kings catch break in NBL27
Repeat: Sydney Kings catch break in NBL27

Sydney Kings head coach Brian Goorjian celebrates after the Kings defeated the Adelaide 36ers in Game 5 of the NBL26 Championship Series to secure the club's championship at Qudos Bank Arena in Sydney on April 5, 2026. Photo: Sarah Reed/Getty Images

Highlights

Sydney Kings have the easiest NBL27 draw while Brisbane and Cairns face the toughest schedules.

Legendary Los Angeles Lakers head coach Pat Riley said: "The hardest thing to do in sport is to repeat".

It's the challenge Brian Goorjian and the Sydney Kings face in NBL27 but with an advantage – the softest schedule after an exclusive analysis by basketball.com.au.

Sydney has the softest schedule, with only 14 games against last season’s top five and 19 against the bottom five.

But importantly, this Strength of Schedule (SoS) only identifies which teams have the toughest fixture based on how strong opponents were last season, not which team has has the toughest NBL27 schedule. basketball.com.au will deliver that analysis when all 10 clubs have their rosters locked in later this year.

Welcome back to the NBL, Will Weaver.

The Brisbane Bullets and Cairns Taipans each have the hardest draws because they each face a heavier mix of last season’s top-five teams.

The Bullets and Taipans finished last and second last so naturally it would appear they have a tougher SoS but there is no respite given they face teams that finished in the NBL26 playoffs – the key for this analysis is the amount of games similarly to Sydney's flip of 14 vs 19.

NBL27 Strength of Schedule Rankings

Ranked by average opponent winning percentage from the NBL26 ladder.

Rank Team Raw SOS Home SOS Away SOS Top-5 Opp Games Bottom-5 Opp Games
1Brisbane Bullets53.3%54.4%52.1%1815
2Cairns Taipans52.7%52.8%52.6%1914
3New Zealand Breakers51.1%49.2%52.9%1815
4Illawarra Hawks51.1%49.6%52.6%1815
5Tasmania JackJumpers50.5%52.1%48.9%1815
6South East Melbourne Phoenix49.6%50.6%48.7%1617
7Perth Wildcats49.2%50.1%48.3%1518
8Melbourne United47.9%45.3%50.8%1419
9Adelaide 36ers47.9%49.4%46.5%1518
10Sydney Kings46.6%46.2%47.0%1419
SOS calculated from the full 33-game fixture using each opponent's NBL26 winning percentage.

NBL27 Matchup Matrix

Number of regular-season games each club plays against every opponent.

Team SYD ADL SEM PER MEL TAS NZ ILL CNS BRI
Sydney Kings-344334444
Adelaide 36ers3-44443434
SEM Phoenix44-4443343
Perth Wildcats444-334443
Melbourne United3443-44344
Tasmania JackJumpers34434-4434
New Zealand Breakers433444-443
Illawarra Hawks4434344-34
Cairns Taipans43444343-4
Brisbane Bullets443344344-
Each row totals 33 games. Team abbreviations: SYD, ADL, SEM, PER, MEL, TAS, NZ, ILL, CNS, BRI.

Sydney is not included in Sydney’s own top-five opponent count.

For SOS, “top-five opponent games” means games against the other clubs that finished in the NBL26 top five.

So for Sydney:

NBL26 top five were:

  1. Sydney
  2. Adelaide
  3. SEM Phoenix
  4. Perth
  5. Melbourne

Sydney cannot play itself, so Sydney’s top-five opponent games are only:

  • Adelaide
  • SEM Phoenix
  • Perth
  • Melbourne

That is why Sydney’s top-five count is 14, not higher.

For bottom-five teams like Brisbane and Cairns, the top-five count can include all five teams:

  • Sydney
  • Adelaide
  • SEM Phoenix
  • Perth
  • Melbourne

So Brisbane reaching 18 top-five opponent games is possible because it can play all five of last season’s top-five teams.

The NBL27 Fixture Paradox: Why Sydney's Draw Looks Harder Than It Is

How could the defending champions have the softest schedule when they play Perth four times, South East Melbourne four times, New Zealand four times and still face Adelaide and Melbourne three times each?

The answer is that the fixture passes the eye test differently than it passes the maths test.

Why people think Sydney has a tough draw

A quick glance at the fixture reveals a steady diet of marquee opponents.

The Kings will play:

  • Perth Wildcats – 4 times
  • South East Melbourne Phoenix – 4 times
  • New Zealand Breakers – 4 times
  • Illawarra Hawks – 4 times
  • Adelaide 36ers – 3 times
  • Melbourne United – 3 times
  • Tasmania JackJumpers – 3 times
  • Cairns Taipans – 4 times
  • Brisbane Bullets – 4 times

For most fans, the Perth and South East Melbourne matchups immediately stand out.

Add Bryce Cotton's Adelaide 36ers, Joe Ingles' Melbourne United and a New Zealand Breakers team featuring Kouat Noi, Dejan Vasiljevic and new head coach Gordon Herbert, and it feels like Sydney has drawn every contender.

NBL27 Games by Day of Week

Distribution of regular season games across the week for each club.

Team Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
Sydney Kings21447510
Adelaide 36ers10474116
SEM Phoenix10481109
Perth Wildcats0055887
Melbourne United11554107
Tasmania JackJumpers3063885
New Zealand Breakers12439311
Illawarra Hawks0046698
Cairns Taipans00655710
Brisbane Bullets1246479
Regular season only. Blitz games excluded.

NBL27 Schedule Density Rankings

Based on season length, recovery windows and average days between games.

Rank Team Season Span Games Per 7 Days Avg Days Between Games 1-Day Rest Games 2-Day Rest Games
1Tasmania JackJumpers146 days1.584.5387
2Cairns Taipans146 days1.584.5349
3Brisbane Bullets146 days1.584.53411
4Sydney Kings147 days1.574.5687
5Perth Wildcats147 days1.574.5676
6Illawarra Hawks147 days1.574.5694
7Melbourne United148 days1.564.5975
8New Zealand Breakers148 days1.564.5936
9Adelaide 36ers149 days1.554.6275
10SEM Phoenix149 days1.554.6257
Higher ranking indicates a more compressed schedule based on season span and recovery opportunities.

What Changed From NBL26?

Last season the Kings played Brisbane five times.

That matters.

The Bullets finished 6-27 and were comfortably the league's weakest team.

Sydney also played Cairns four times, New Zealand four times and Tasmania four times.

In NBL27, the Kings lose one Brisbane game and one Tasmania game but gain additional games against Perth, South East Melbourne and Illawarra.

On paper, that feels tougher.

Why The Numbers Disagree

The Strength of Schedule model uses NBL26 results only.

Sydney's four games each against Brisbane, Cairns, New Zealand and Illawarra account for 16 of their 33 games.

All four clubs finished in the bottom five last season.

That's the key.

While the Kings have several blockbuster matchups, they still play more games against last season's bottom-five clubs than any other contender.

The result:

  • 14 games against last season's top five
  • 19 games against last season's bottom five

No other NBL27 title contender has that balance.

The Travel Question

This is where the analysis becomes more interesting.

The opponent-quality model says Sydney has the easiest schedule.

The travel model may tell a different story.

The Kings make:

  • Two trips to Perth
  • Two trips to New Zealand
  • Two trips to Cairns
  • Two trips to Tasmania

That's a significant amount of long-haul travel.

When coaches and high-performance staff discuss schedule difficulty, they're often talking about flights, recovery and turnaround times rather than ladder positions.

A trip to Perth followed by another road game two days later can be more challenging than a home game against a higher-ranked opponent.

The Verdict

Both arguments can be true.

Sydney's fixture contains some of the biggest games of NBL27 and plenty of travel.

But based purely on how opponents performed in NBL26, the Kings still received the league's most favourable draw.

The eye test says Sydney's schedule looks brutal.

The numbers say Brian Goorjian's team has been handed the softest path to defending its championship.

That's the NBL27 fixture paradox.

How We Calculated NBL27 Strength of Schedule

The NBL27 SoS rankings were calculated using the final NBL26 regular-season ladder and the full NBL27 fixture.

Each team was assigned its NBL26 winning percentage as a measure of strength. Sydney entered the calculation at 72.7 per cent after finishing first, Adelaide at 69.7 per cent, South East Melbourne at 66.7 per cent, Perth at 63.6 per cent and Melbourne at 60.6 per cent. Tasmania, New Zealand, Illawarra, Cairns and Brisbane rounded out the remaining ratings based on their NBL26 records.

From there, every game in the NBL27 fixture was counted and a complete matchup matrix was built showing how many times each club plays every opponent across the 33-game season. Each opponent's NBL26 winning percentage was then applied to every scheduled matchup.

A team's raw SOS is simply the average winning percentage of all 33 opponents on its schedule. Teams that face Sydney, Adelaide, South East Melbourne, Perth and Melbourne more frequently receive a higher SOS, while teams with more games against Tasmania, New Zealand, Illawarra, Cairns and Brisbane receive a lower SOS.

Home and away SOS figures were calculated separately using the same methodology, allowing us to identify whether stronger opponents are concentrated at home or on the road.

We also counted how many games each club plays against last season's top five teams and bottom five teams. This provides additional context around the fixture balance and helps explain why some clubs rank higher or lower than expected.

It's important to note this is a backward-looking model based solely on NBL26 results. It does not account for roster changes, imports, free agency, injuries, coaching changes, home-court advantage or travel. Instead, it provides a clean measure of fixture difficulty based on how successful opponents were last season.

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