4.6 Article

Home is where the hustle is: the influence of crowds on effort and home advantage in the National Basketball Association

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 40, Issue 20, Pages 2343-2352

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2022.2154933

Keywords

Athlete; performance; rebound; audience effect; NBA

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Government through Research Training Program scholarships
  2. 2020-2021 Australian-American Fulbright Scholarship
  3. Kinghorn Foundation
  4. Department of Industry, Innovation and Science (Australian Government) [ICG000899, ICG001546]
  5. SIEF Ross Metcalf STEM+ Business Fellowship

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Studies have shown that crowds play a significant role in the home advantage in NBA games by inspiring home teams, distracting opponents, and influencing referees. A natural experiment created by the COVID-19 pandemic, which eliminated crowds in a significant percentage of games, revealed that the presence of crowds led to a higher winning percentage and better performance in rebounding and scoring for home teams. These findings highlight the importance of crowd influence in the NBA and its impact on the game.
Studies have consistently shown crowds contribute to home advantage in the National Basketball Association (NBA) by inspiring home team effort, distracting opponents, and influencing referees. Quantifying the effect of crowds is challenging, however, due to potential co-occurring drivers of home advantage (e.g., travel, location familiarity). Our aim was to isolate the crowd effect using a natural experiment created by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, which eliminated crowds in 53.4% of 2020/2021 NBA regular season games (N = 1080). Using mixed linear models, we show, in games with crowds, home teams won 58.65% of games and, on average, outrebounded and outscored their opponents. This was a significant improvement compared to games without crowds, of which home teams won 50.60% of games and, on average, failed to outrebound or outscore their opponents. Further, the crowd-related increase in rebound differential mediated the relationship between crowds and points differential. Taken together, these results suggest home advantage in the 2020/2021 NBA season was predominately driven by the presence of home crowds and their influence on the effort exerted to rebound the basketball. These findings are of considerable significance to a league where marginal gains can have immense competitive, financial, and historic consequences.

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