Home advantage ‘halved’ for football teams playing in empty stadiums

Teams scored fewer goals, were awarded fewer fouls and accrued fewer points when playing at home without supporters, a study found.
Tottenham Hotspur fans roared their side on to victory in the opening match of the season (Nick Potts/PA)
PA Wire
Tom Wilkinson17 August 2021

Home advantage almost halved for football teams playing in front of an empty stadium, new research has found.

A study of professional matches across Europe during the pandemic – when fans were not allowed to attend games – found the home team scored fewer goals, won fewer points and were awarded fewer fouls without supporters cheering them on and influencing referees.

Researchers from Northumbria and Leeds universities found that the home side would accrue on average 0.39 more points per game than an away side if fans were present.

But that figure fell to 0.22 more points – almost halving – if the stadium was empty.

This new knowledge reveals that in the most basic sense, fans attendance matters

Dane McCarrick

The home team with fans would score on average 0.29 goals more than the away side, falling to 0.15 goals more for games without supporters.

The study looked at statistics from almost 5,000 games played in the English Premier League and Championship Germany’s Bundesliga 1 and 2, Spain’s La Liga 1 and 2 and Italy’s Serie A and B, as well as the top Portuguese, Greek, Turkish, Austrian, Danish, Russian and Swiss leagues.

Referees awarded more fouls against the home side and gave far fewer yellow cards against away teams in empty stadia.

Lead author Dane McCarrick, from the University of Leeds’ School of Psychology, said the pandemic allowed for an in-depth study of the age-old question.

He said: “This provided an unintentional, and unique, opportunity to examine one of the most talked about and empirically studied phenomena in professional team sport: the home advantage.

“This new knowledge reveals that in the most basic sense, fans attendance matters.”

Dr Sandy Wolfson, a sport and exercise psychologist from Northumbria University’s Department of Psychology, also worked on the study and said: “This is a really important investigation that contributes to the long-standing debate on the main reasons for the home advantage in sport – a worldwide phenomenon affecting team sports at all levels, from recreational to elite.”

The study, Home Advantage During The Covid-19 Pandemic: Analyses Of European Football Leagues is published in the September issue of Psychology Of Sport And Exercise.

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