Things do not even themselves out over and season this is where Matt Bianco's argument falls down. It is quite funny that the example he chooses perfectly illustrates that we were very lucky to go down from the Premiership. The league table did in fact lie that year, as we had no luck whatsoever and West Ham got all the luck. Last season Wednesday were lucky to pip us to 2nd (they got some very flukey results, we had our start striker sent down etc) and therefore the league table lied then (we should have finished 2nd). Random chance chose Ched Evans trial to be with 3 games to go. A week later and we would probably have already been promoted.
It is perfectly feasible that a team can be very unlucky all season (or longer). It would only even itself out if they played infinitely. A team could have 80% possession, goals disallowed, hit the woodwork, other keeper plays a blinder and thoroughly deserve to win the game and yet lose. This could happen to them 4 or 5 times and there is nothing to say that it will go for them (that is the same thing happen to other teams).
I am not saying that there is a better way of doing things than the league table. I am just saying it contains randomness.
I am guessing we will not be able to take this back to talking about the current league table and whther it is likely to stay like this?
This all discussion about the league table "lying" is actually nonsensical. The league table cannot lie as it is a record of results that happened in various football matches where 3 points was awarded for a win and 1 for a draw. It completely and 100% accurately reflects what happened in those matches.
What I think you are trying to say isthat judging whether team A is better and than team B on the 3 points/1 points 46 matches basis is an imperfect means of assessing that. Well, of course it is. But then any method would be imperfect and potentially contestable.