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Journal Article

Citation

Armatas V, Pollard R. Eur. J. Sport Sci. 2014; 14(2): 116-122.

Affiliation

a Special Education Department , University of Thessaly , Volos , Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/17461391.2012.736537

PMID

24533517

Abstract

Home advantage as it relates to team performance at football (soccer) was examined in Superleague Greece using nine seasons of game-by-game performance data, a total of 2160 matches. After adjusting for team ability and annual fluctuations in home advantage, there were significant differences between teams. Previous findings regarding the role of territorial protection were strengthened by the fact that home advantage was above average for the team from Xanthi (P =0.015), while lower for teams from the capital city Athens (P =0.008). There were differences between home and away teams in the incidence of most of the 13 within-game match variables, but associated effect sizes were only moderate. In contrast, outcome ratios derived from these variables, and measuring shot success, had negligible effect sizes. This supported a previous finding that home and away teams differed in the incidence of on-the-ball behaviours, but not in their outcomes. By far the most important predictor of home advantage, as measured by goal difference, was the difference between home and away teams in terms of kicked shots from inside the penalty area. Other types of shots had little effect on the final score. The absence of a running track between spectators and the playing field was also a significant predictor of goal difference, worth an average of 0.102 goals per game to the home team. Travel distance did not affect home advantage.


Language: en

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