I'm watching the Stanley Cup, and so far this series the home team has absolutely dominated. How do you lose 5-1 on the road then win 5-1 at home. Every game has been like this.
you clearly haven't watched all the games. In Game 1, nearly 3/4 of the game was dominated by the road team. Pitt didnt have a shot on goal for nearly 40 minutes. Nashville erased a 3-0 lead , Pitt scored late to win it. Pitt was outshot 26-11 Also game 3 was not dominated by Pitt- it was 1-1 going into the third, level hockey for 2 periods. Pitt got a quick one to start the 3rd then with momentum took over.
[h=1]Home Field Advantage Explained...[/h][h=1]Sort Of[/h] Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports Are Played and Games Are Won was released at about the same time my book The Fix Is In was. Now I'm willing to make a leap of faith and say that I'd guess at least one of the two authors is smarter than I am. I know both make more money than I do. One, Tobias J. Moskowitz, is the Fama Family Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago. The other, L. Jon Wertheim, is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated. That said, in reading their tome--from which I will liberally quote from below--I believe they missed something. Either that, or the two of them are too chicken to say what they really meant (but I'm not). The pair devote two chapters to the topic of home field advantage. They ask, "What causes this phenomenon? Does it even exist?" |
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| They do make a case, in the realm of the NBA and NHL, that scheduling plays a role. Often times, teams in these leagues make road trips in which several games are crammed into a short time frame, basically wearing teams out. When road teams play back-to-back contests on consecutive nights, they lose much more often than they win (take note, gamblers). In fact, they quote one anonymous NBA owner as saying, "If only [fans] knew how the NBA scheduled games. Teams submit blocked dates for their arena [i.e., dates when the circus is using the building or the NHL team is using the facility]. The NBA picks ‘marquee TV match-ups,’ and then one guy figures out the rest with marginal help from software. Teams kiss his ass because we know he can throw more losses at us than Kobe can!” |
Also, It turns out that offensive and loose ball fouls go the home team’s way at twice the rate of other personal fouls. We can also look at fouls that are more valuable, such as those that cause a change of possession. These fouls are almost four times more likely to go the home team’s way than fouls that don’t cause a change of possessionThe chance of a visiting player getting called for traveling is 15 percent higher than it is for a home team player." "Referee bias could well be the main reason for home court advantage in basketball. And if the refs call turnovers and fouls in the home team’s favor, we can assume they make other biased calls in favor of the home team that we cannot see or measure." (pages 152-155) |
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