+1
Those Seattle fans deserve making it to the Super Bowl with how much they live and breath Seahawks football. That 12th man is amazing.
It would be fun as hell to be in the crowd right now and in the city for the rest of the night......
+1
Those Seattle fans deserve making it to the Super Bowl with how much they live and breath Seahawks football. That 12th man is amazing.
Armando Salguero @ArmandoSalguero 25m
Richard Sherman just went from hero to goat in my book. Come at me.
Michael Silver @MikeSilver 2m
I sincerely hope people don't frame this game in a non-positive manner. Two worthy champions went head to head and one prevailed. No goats.
I was watching the NFL Primetime show before the game and what I was most impressed with was how the Seattle Seahawks come together and raise the 12th man flag before the game. They are energized and have a great fan base. My question to you is: what would you suggest to bring fans together? To start a tradition to rally behind and hopefully motivate the players and fan base. Any ideas are welcome!
1. win
2. build new and smaller stadium
3. ???
4. profit
If Miami is smart, they'll try to get a piece of that Seattle FO.
build a new stadium with creative architecture that gets the fans closer to the action then any other stadium and you will have what you wish for.The Seahawks have the best fans in the NFL. Miami, not so much.
Would love to have the 12th man like they do.
the stadium design engages the fans into the action Nublar, when the fans are engaged into the game, when they are close enough, they can then impact the teams performance and the game, thus giving them purpose and reason to unite.+1
Those Seattle fans deserve making it to the Super Bowl with how much they live and breath Seahawks football. That 12th man is amazing.
if they were smart, if any owner was smart, they'd build their own stadium with a design that intimidates thru intimacy.If Miami is smart, they'll try to get a piece of that Seattle FO.
My question to you is: what would you suggest to bring fans together? To start a tradition to rally behind and hopefully motivate the players and fan base. Any ideas are welcome!
Hence the delay in announcing the new GM. Some here would be content with Farmer or Hickey. Those guys are 2nd tier. Go for the big fish.
Seattle's McGloughlin should be swept off his feet by Ross. Make an offer that he cannot refuse.
djphinfan is correct. Seemingly he only posts here regarding this topic, but his words should be stenciled on Stephen Ross' forehead. Make it backwards, so they read properly when he looks in the mirror.
The stadium won't do it by itself. The first season or so in the Seattle venue are irrelevant. It has to be constructed to enable maximum benefit when the team is capable and the stands packed. When I was a kid I can't tell you how good it felt to head to the Orange Bowl for those early '70s Dolphin games, knowing that the opponent would be shell shocked. I couldn't get the grin off my face.
Then the same benefit transferred to Canes games in their heyday.
I've posted the specifics on many sites. We essentially threw away 2.5 points per game on average when we abandoned the Orange Bowl for Sun Life. If that doesn't sound like much, you're nuts. As a bettor it costs 10 cents, from -110 to -120 juice, just to buy a half point. Only a premier quarterback is worth 2.5 points per game.
The best way I know how to compare is to use road performance to gauge the level of the team over an extended period, and then adjust by 5.4 points to arrive at an expected home margin. Fans and media round to 3 points for home field advantage in football but it's actually closer to 2.7 points in the NFL.
From 1966 to 1986 the Dolphins averaged 20.56 points per game on the road while allowing 19.95, for a net of +.61 per game. That should align with a home edge of +6.0 (.6 + 5.4). But the Orange Bowl was responsible for an amazing +7.5 net. Miami averaged 24.31 while allowing 16.79. That means the Orange Bowl accounted for roughly 1.5 points per game above expectation. The defensive number of 16.79 is the lowest I've ever seen for that type of duration, 21 seasons. It indicates to me that the Orange Bowl noise level enabled the defense to play above its actual level.
The 21 year period from '66 through '86 is a good balance because it includes expansion years, dynasty years and moderate years. During short stretches a team may be comparatively very good or very poor on the road but over 21 seasons it evens out, so the road numbers are representative of the overall level, IMO.
From 1987 forth, the Dolphins have averaged 19.24 in road games while allowing 21.40 for a net of -2.16. Note that the overall level of the team declined sharply compared to 1966-1986. That's why you can't make a direct comparison from the Orange Bowl numbers to the Sun Life numbers. But even the adjusted net is devastating. Miami has scored 21.54 at home in this stadium while allowing 19.23 for a net of +2.31. Given the road numbers, however, the expectation in Sun Life should be +3.24, which is a 5.4 point adjustment from the road net of -2.16.
My conclusion is Sun Life plays 1 point worse than the typical football home venue, while the Orange Bowl was a phenomenal 1.5 points superior to the norm. Anyone who wagers frequently will notice that bettors play against the Dolphins in the late going in the majority of their home games. The line typically moves either a half point or full point toward the visitor on Sunday morning. That is not a coincidence and it's been going on for more than a decade. The speculators compile numbers like the ones I've detailed, and they realize that Sun Life is not worth the full 2.7 points.
I should point out that I've yet to add the 2013 home and road numbers to the data. But obviously it would move the numbers only a fraction of a point, if that. We certainly didn't demonstrate home prowess with the 4 defeats.