home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.sport.basketball.college
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!hobbes.physics.uiowa.edu!news.iastate.edu!tbird.cc.iastate.edu!michaelv
- From: michaelv@iastate.edu (Michael L. VanLoon)
- Subject: Re: #1 Student Section ?
- Message-ID: <michaelv.727987188@tbird.cc.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA
- References: <1993Jan19.124043.25084@ms.uky.edu> <00966F0C.13518A40@abby.chem.ucla.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 18:39:48 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- In <00966F0C.13518A40@abby.chem.ucla.edu> larry@abby.chem.ucla.edu writes:
-
- > fehr@ms.uky.edu (Jeff Davis) writes:
- >>I think that a lot of the comments from players about how the crowd
- >>really helps blah-blah-blah is a little bit of PR and a little bit
- >>of snake oil on the psyche. Every single one of my kids this
- [blah...]
-
- > I would have to agree with Jeff here. I think the effect of crowd
- >noise for either pumping up a home team or tearing down the away
- >team is overrated. As another example, one of the most popular
- [blah blah...]
-
- I think this is a bunch of bull. The home court has several
- advantages over a visitors court for a team. Remember, we're talking
- about humans here and not machines. Sometimes imperceptible things
- can throw a person just enough to mess up his/her game.
-
- Of course, not all courts are the same, so I'll qualify this by saying
- it's my perception from Hilton Colliseum, ISU's home court.
-
- Advantages:
-
- 1) Drowning them out. Placing the Pep Band right next to the visitors
- bench makes it much more difficult for them to discuss strategic game
- plans with a lot of brass blowing right in their ears. This, while
- the home bench is basically on the other side of the arena with a
- bunch of bodies blocking the sound between them and the band.
-
- 2) The crowd as another official. I guess you have to have a fairly
- knowledgeable crowd to begin with. When the ref's make several really
- awful calls in a row against the home team and the crowd starts making
- a *lot* of really ugly noise in a real loud way, the ref's are likely
- to think to themselves "Maybe I missed something on that call" and
- give a makeup call a little bit later. In essence, putting a little
- fear and doubt into the refs' minds when they start screwing your team
- over--making them question themselves next time.
-
- 3) Familiarity/locality. It's where *you* play. It just feels right
- to play here. You don't feel out of place. Besides, you walk down
- the street to get here. In a lot of cases, the visiting team just
- took a long bus/plane ride and is probably a little tight.
-
- 4) The crowd as a booster. I don't care how much you tell me the
- crowd noise doesn't matter. I've heard several basketball players say
- "The crowd really gave us a boost to get back in this one." When a
- team is a bit behind and the momentum is going against them, and the
- crowd starts getting behind them, it can make a difference in the
- momentum of the game. If you deny the crowd-booster effect, then
- you're going to have to deny game momentum as well, in my book.
-
-
- I'm no psychology major, but you can't deny the psychology of the home
- crowd. While it may be a much bigger factor in some places than it is
- in others, I believe it does make a difference.
-
- --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Michael L. VanLoon Project Vincent Systems Staff
- michaelv@iastate.edu Iowa State University Computation Center
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-