ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Michigan's football players charged out of the Big House tunnel and leaped to touch a banner at midfield, following a tradition that has made 100,000-plus fans roar for decades.
With a Michigan Stadium record-low crowd of 615 people at the Michigan State game last week, the Wolverines looked flat and lost to follow an early trend in the conference.
All five Big Ten teams that hosted games last Saturday lost. That bleak day dropped the overall record for home games in the conference to 6-7 during the COVID-19 pandemic that has sharply limited attendance at the stadiums.
"I definitely think things are a lot more balanced without any crowd or any fans," Michigan linebacker Josh Ross said.
Of course, the Big Ten is just two games into its pandemic-shortened, eight-game season. Home teams may end up with a winning record as they have in each of the previous five seasons since the conference expanded to 14 schools.
There is no doubt, however, that the sights and sounds are much different with the crowd limited to a small number of family members and friends. Each Michigan players was allowed to have four tickets for family and friends last week while Michigan State's football program was given 300 tickets to distribute.
The lack of fan-filled stadiums may limit the edge home teams have enjoyed — and perhaps give visitors an emotional boost.
"These players have been stuck in the same town for months so maybe there's a field-trip effect at play as they go on road trips with their teammates and coaches," said Dan Saferstein, a sports psychologist based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. "Maybe the home teams, meanwhile, feel a void because they're playing in stadiums that are basically empty and that takes away from the advantage their accustomed to."