Originally Posted by
Eric the Half a Bee
I'm not so convinced.
At the time of writing this, 74 playoff first legs finished as draws, meaning the second legs were a case of starting from scratch. 51 second legs were won by the home team (the higher ranked side), with 23 wins by the away side. That would suggest home advantage does make a difference.
However, if you look at those stats on a division by division basis, the Championship is far closer in terms of which teams go through after a first leg draw, currently reading 12-10 to the home sides in the second leg.
Of course, there could be an element of teams thinking they'd done the hard work by getting a draw away from home, then taking their foot off the gas in the second leg. I still think there's a lot of pressure on a side to win at home if that's what is needed. 29% of teams at home in the second leg that lost away manage to get through. 48% of sides at home in the second leg fail to make the final if they need to win on the night (even if it is only on penalties). 84% of sides that win away in the first leg make the final.
Currently 39% of teams that finish in the highest playoff spot win promotion. 22% of all sides that finish in the second highest playoff spot win promotion. Between them, the teams in the two highest playoff spots make up 58% of all the teams in the final.