Abstract

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, European elite football (a.k.a. soccer) leagues played the remaining season 2019/20 without or strongly limited attendance of supporters (i.e., “ghost games”). From a sport psychological perspective this situation poses a unique opportunity to investigate the crowd's influence on referee decisions and the associated effect of “home advantage.” A total of 1286 matches–played in the top leagues of Spain, England, Germany, Italy, Russia, Turkey, Austria and the Czech Republic–were analyzed for results, fouls, bookings and reasons for bookings and contrasted between respective matchdays of season 2018/19 (regular attendance) and season 2019/20 (ghost games). Following recent methodological developments in the research on the home advantage effect, four different statistical analyses–including Pollard's traditional method–were used for the assessment of the home advantage effect. There are two main findings. First, home teams were booked significantly more often with yellow cards for committing fouls in ghost games. Most importantly, this effect was independent of the course of the games. In contrast, bookings for other reasons (criticism and unfair sportsmanship) changed similarly for both home and away teams in ghost games. Second, the overall home performance and home advantage effect in the respective elite leagues–identified in the respective matches of the regular 2018/19 season–vanished in the ghost games of the 2019/20 season. We conclude that the lack of supporters in top European football during the COVID-19 pandemic led to decreased social pressure from the ranks on referees, which also had a potential impact on the home advantage. Referees assessed the play of home teams more objectively, leading to increased yellow cards awarded for fouls committed by the home teams. Since there were no significant changes in referee decisions against the away teams, we argue that our observations reflect a reduction of unconscious favoritism of referees for the home teams.

Highlights

  • Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, European top football (a.k.a. soccer) leagues paused competition around the middle of March 2020

  • If calculated without draws, the home performance increases to 63.5% wins in season 2018/19 and 52.5% wins in season 2019/20

  • Our findings on significantly decreased yellow cards awarded for unfair sportsmanship are in line with results from recent research, where it was found that ghost games have an overall calming effect on players, staff and officials, with an increase in fair-play behavior (Leitner and Richlan, 2021)

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, European top football (a.k.a. soccer) leagues paused competition around the middle of March 2020. The first league to restart was the “German Bundesliga” on May 16. Belgium, Netherlands and Scotland suspended their leagues and aborted (“ORF Sport (2020). Frühlingserwachen in Europas Ligen,” 2020; “SPIEGEL Sport (2020). The fundamental requirement for restarting competition was to play matches without the attendance of supporters; so-called “ghost games.”. The Russian league chose to let a strongly limited number of supporters−10% of each stadium’s capacity–attend matches (MDZ, 2020). The circumstance of missing supporters on this unprecedented large scale in Europe’s elite football leagues poses a unique situation in the history of professional football to investigate the crowds’ influence on referees’ decisions

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