This "they did well cos they had more players" argument is completely flawed.
How do people explain Wales coming 2nd with the 4th largest team and the North East finishing 3rd with the 5th largest team, not sure but I think Yorkshire was 5th with the 8th or 9th largest team?
The way I explain it is that they played as teams and not individuals. By that I don"t mean soft play, but bonded together as teams, which helped keep everyone interested, railing each other, dishing out banter to other teams, which meant people turned up each week. Team captains sent out messages to remind people to play, set up private games for team members to play together outside of the league, had a vibrant facebook page where people could post up for railers if they ran deep somewhere, set up meetups for those that lived near each other. It all adds up, but it takes some commitment from the captains.
I am just glad we had a captain in Paul Sefton who was prepared, imho, to go above and beyond for the team.