San Diego Union-Tribune

HOME-FIELD ADVANTAGE NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE

Road teams have chipped away at problems that used to hamper them

- BY ADAM KILGORE & NEIL GREENBERG

The value of home-field advantage has long been ingrained in the NFL. Home teams track the decibel level of the crowd on their scoreboard­s. Coaches at midweek news conference­s implore fans to show up and be loud. Analysts discuss it all season long in relation to the playoff race. Bookmakers bake it into their point spreads.

Last year, with stadiums permitting either partial crowds or no fans at all, home-field advantage vanished. Road teams won more often for the first time on record, posting a .502 winning percentage. When NFL stadiums welcomed back fans this season, home-field advantage was expected to rejoin them. It has not. Teams playing in their home stadium went 137-131-1, just barely back above .500 and, aside from 2020, the worst record since at least 2002.

“You’re not getting the types of crowds you have in the past,” Washington Football Team coach Ron Rivera said. “Hopefully if (the pandemic) ever does ease up and we know how to deal with it, it may change things.”

But the age-old presumptio­n that playing at home provides a significan­t benefit has been dwindling for years, for reasons unrelated to the pandemic. A constellat­ion of factors ranging from sports science advances, to the size of visitors’ locker rooms, to the online secondary ticket market have conspired to negate the home team’s edge.

For much of the NFL’s existence, frenzied home crowds intimidate­d visitors and made it difficult for road quarterbac­ks to communicat­e and make adjustment­s at the line of scrimmage; travel presented disorienti­ng challenges for players; and conditions inside stadiums discomfort­ed visiting teams. From 2002 to 2018, home teams won at least 56 percent of the time during all but two seasons, and in three seasons won at least 60 percent.

In various ways, effects of those factors have dissipated. In the past three years, home teams have not

cracked 52-percent wins. More than half of this season’s playoff teams — the Bengals, Patriots, Raiders, Cowboys, Eagles, Rams, Cardinals and 49ers — posted a better record on the road than at home. The Cardinals averaged seven points fewer in Arizona than they did on the road, and finished with a losing record at home. So did the Eagles, who allowed 2.6 points per drive at home, the second-worst mark in the NFL. So, too, did the Patriots, who hadn’t had a losing record at home since Bill Belichick’s first year as coach in 2000. The 12th man needs to watch the film and regroup.

“Winning on the road is not as big of a challenge, in my opinion, as it was probably 10, 15 years ago,” Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said, according to the Associated Press.

Road teams have refined how they travel with the help of modernized technology and study. Around 2015, Rivera began rethinking how his teams traveled, driven by data culled from playertrac­king devices. When Washington played the Broncos in Denver this season, Rivera relied on a study that showed altitude affects performanc­e less in the 24 hours after arrival, so Washington arrived the night before the game.

Scott Trulock, now the head athletic trainer at Florida State, worked in the NFL for two decades, most recently as the Jacksonvil­le

Jaguars’ director of player health and performanc­e. He saw firsthand how road teams chipped away at their disadvanta­ge, from studies about the effects of changing time zones to having players travel wearing compressio­n sleeves.

In the past, when teams arrived they would check into the hotel, go out to dinner, attend team meetings and go to sleep. Now, “they’re a MASH unit,” Trulock said. “A mobile training unit is set up within minutes.” Trainers and strength coaches drag trunks full of recovery devices off the bus and wheel them into a ballroom, turning it into a treatment center in about 15 minutes. On schedule, players stick their feet in Normatec compressio­n boots, receive massages and lounge in cold tubs, all to counteract the effects of flying and recover from the toll of practices.

Trulock believes road teams may even have the advantage with recovery on the eve of games. Fewer teams require all their players to stay in a hotel the night before home games. On the road, players can focus on their bodies without distractio­n. “It’s much more controllab­le when you’re traveling,” Trulock said

Over the past five years or so, teams that previously used medium-sized charter planes have either chartered larger planes — a 777 used for internatio­nal travel — or partnered with airlines to own their own. (The New England Patriots were at the forefront of that.) The entire plane is essentiall­y a firstclass section.

“That really was a gamechange­r in terms of lowering the stress of travel,” Trulock said. “Players can be comfortabl­e. They can sleep better. They can eat without being on top of each other. That was a real significan­t change.”

Another change unnoticeab­le from outside a franchise: the size of visiting locker rooms. As new stadiums proliferat­ed, the NFL updated the standards of what teams must offer in the opposing locker room. Visiting locker rooms now are roomy enough for training staffs to set up portable tables, so players’ massage therapy and muscle activation can be the same as home.

Visiting teams haven’t just refined how they reach far-flung cities; they also find a less hostile atmosphere once they arrive. Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Kurt

Warner, now an NFL Network analyst, has noticed a difference as he traveled to games this season for “Monday Night Football” radio broadcasts.

“I haven’t felt like the stadiums have been quite as full, it’s been quite as raucous, as we’ve seen before,” Warner said. “I haven’t necessaril­y felt the fans be quite as engaged as we have in most situations. Maybe some of the fan bases, not everybody is willing to come back to the stadium. When I go to the games it just doesn’t feel the same.”

It’s a stretch to call an NFL game a tame or sober environmen­t. But Bills fan Ken Johnson of Rochester, N.Y. — who attended 423 consecutiv­e Buffalo Bills games, home and away, before coronaviru­s restrictio­ns kept him home last season — insists teams have grown stricter in limiting alcohol

and removing fans who have been overserved. “It drove the riffraff into the bars,” Johnson said.

Johnson remembers placing newspaper classified ads in opposing cities looking for tickets. Now, it takes five minutes to buy seats on the online secondary market. The ease has created a compoundin­g effect. The more visiting fans who travel, the more attractive it becomes for others to join, to make a weekend of it as fans organize events and take over bars. On game day, those fans mitigate the effect of the home crowd. Sometimes, they overrun the stadium.

“If you were blind and sitting in the stands, you wouldn’t be able to figure out who the home team and road team was if you listened,” Johnson said.

Last Sunday, San Francisco 49ers fans inundated SoFi Stadium and roared as they watched their team erase a 17-0 lead against the host Los Angeles Rams. Afterward, Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford called his home stadium “a tough environmen­t for us to communicat­e in, really, the whole second half.”

After the opening kick, road teams are less disadvanta­ged in subtle ways. More offenses have adopted fast tempo, which forces quarterbac­ks to dictate plays at the line of scrimmage. Paradoxica­lly, that can make it easier to communicat­e in front of road fans. Those plays can typically be communicat­ed with just one word or one hand signal, and a no-huddle offense tends to simplify how defenses play.

The Cardinals, who went 8-1 on the road this season, used a no-huddle offense far more than any other team during the regular season: 402 plays (at home and on the road). The Rams, who went 7-2 on the road, ran the third-most plays without a huddle. Dallas (7-2 road record), Tampa Bay (6-3) and Philadelph­ia (6-3) also finished among the league leaders in no-huddle snaps.

Home-field advantage may be endangered, but it is not yet extinct. At the NFL’s more venerable stadiums, the home team has kept out the invaders and created an old-fashioned atmosphere. The Green Bay Packers, guaranteed to play at home until the Super Bowl as the NFC’s top seed, went 8-0 this season at Lambeau Field, where frigid conditions make life uncomforta­ble. At Arrowhead Stadium, one of the loudest places in the country on Sundays, the Kansas City Chiefs went 7-2.

But things have shifted. Trulock’s first full-time job came with the Eagles in the late-1990s. He remembers watching the upper deck bounce at Washington’s RFK Stadium and wondering if it would collapse. Before one home game, he peered up into the 600 level of Veterans Stadium and saw Philadelph­ians tossing around a man in a Cowboys jersey.

“Certainly,” he said, “the hostility has changed in a lot of stadiums.”

 ?? GINA FERAZZI L.A. TIMES ?? 49ers fans, like many other teams’ fans, travel well, as they did last weekend at SoFi Stadium to see their team beat the Rams.
GINA FERAZZI L.A. TIMES 49ers fans, like many other teams’ fans, travel well, as they did last weekend at SoFi Stadium to see their team beat the Rams.
 ?? JOE SCARNICI GETTY IMAGES ?? 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo waves to S.F. fans before last week’s game against the Rams at SoFi Stadium.
JOE SCARNICI GETTY IMAGES 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo waves to S.F. fans before last week’s game against the Rams at SoFi Stadium.

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