Originally posted by sincalfaithful:Originally posted by thuglife619:did the 49ers tell you where your brick might be placed?
through Pete Carroll's windshield hopefully
Lol
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Originally posted by sincalfaithful:Originally posted by thuglife619:did the 49ers tell you where your brick might be placed?
through Pete Carroll's windshield hopefully
Originally posted by HudsonValley:
Originally posted by Fadetoblack:
That is a perfect stadium for the 49ers. Outdoors trumps fancy indoor facility 9 times out of 10, football is meant to be enjoyed outside. I think the personality of the franchise would be adversely effected if they went from a traditional field like the Stick to some crappy dome, no matter how nice.
Although I agree with the idea of an outdoor stadium, the advantage a dome stadium would offer us is the ability to amplify crowd noise. Lets be honest with ourselves. We dont exactly have the most vocal fanbase, and Ive never heard of any non-Niner player/team fear coming to Candlestick to play us. Im hoping the new stadium design will help "contain" the crowd noise within the stadium, making it tougher for opposite teams to play here. Supposedly the design team took all this into account.
Originally posted by chico49erfan:
Originally posted by Young2Rice:
Seattle doesn't have a dome. They have large sound reflecting ceiling over the crowd that direct noise straight to the field.
edit: sorry, you probably meant the kingdome.
Still though. - that same design is happening for the 49ers stadium I believe. I wish I had a link but I remember reading it somewhere
Originally posted by Beeker:Originally posted by chico49erfan:Originally posted by Young2Rice:Seattle doesn't have a dome. They have large sound reflecting ceiling over the crowd that direct noise straight to the field.
edit: sorry, you probably meant the kingdome.
Still though. - that same design is happening for the 49ers stadium I believe. I wish I had a link but I remember reading it somewhere
2/3 of the seating is in the lower bowl. Think about the noise that will be generated from the East side of the stadium reverberating off the West side suite wall!
Originally posted by Marvin49:In all honesty I don't really care about having a loud stadium. It would be nice, but I'm not tripping on it.
All the teams I've seen who have that kind of advantage at home seem to have issues on the road when they DON'T have that advantage.
Look at Seattle. Atlanta. They are tigers at home and kittens on the road.
Originally posted by goodthings19:
Originally posted by Marvin49:
In all honesty I don't really care about having a loud stadium. It would be nice, but I'm not tripping on it.
All the teams I've seen who have that kind of advantage at home seem to have issues on the road when they DON'T have that advantage.
Look at Seattle. Atlanta. They are tigers at home and kittens on the road.
An interesting point. I wonder how much those teams road woes is because of the drop off in fan support and how much of it is because of bad coaching/player toughness?
Originally posted by Marvin49:Originally posted by goodthings19:Originally posted by Marvin49:In all honesty I don't really care about having a loud stadium. It would be nice, but I'm not tripping on it.
All the teams I've seen who have that kind of advantage at home seem to have issues on the road when they DON'T have that advantage.
Look at Seattle. Atlanta. They are tigers at home and kittens on the road.
An interesting point. I wonder how much those teams road woes is because of the drop off in fan support and how much of it is because of bad coaching/player toughness?
I think it's because those teams aren't as good as their record would indicate.
The home advantage is good for an extera win or 2 every year but when they get into the playoffs they don't get that advantage all the way through. When those teams have to play one of the big boys without the crowd behind them they crumble.
There is a reason why up until the Colts won a few years ago that no team that plays its home games in a dome had ever won the Super Bowl. Now I believe the Colts and Saints have, but that's it.
Originally posted by Beeker:Originally posted by chico49erfan:Originally posted by Young2Rice:Seattle doesn't have a dome. They have large sound reflecting ceiling over the crowd that direct noise straight to the field.
edit: sorry, you probably meant the kingdome.
Still though. - that same design is happening for the 49ers stadium I believe. I wish I had a link but I remember reading it somewhere
2/3 of the seating is in the lower bowl. Think about the noise that will be generated from the East side of the stadium reverberating off the West side suite wall!
Originally posted by StOnEy333:
There's a college stadium that has a similar design as the new SC stadium, with the suites all in one tower on one side of the field. I forget where it's at, but we talked about it somewhere in this thread. The fans of that team seem to think that the sound dissipates instead of amplifying on the tower. Granted I don't think that other stadium concentrated the majority of the fans in the lower bowl like SC, but its something to think about. We'll just have to wait and see how it actully sounds when the stadium is filled and rocking.
Originally posted by Marvin49:
I think it's because those teams aren't as good as their record would indicate.
The home advantage is good for an extera win or 2 every year but when they get into the playoffs they don't get that advantage all the way through. When those teams have to play one of the big boys without the crowd behind them they crumble.
There is a reason why up until the Colts won a few years ago that no team that plays its home games in a dome had ever won the Super Bowl. Now I believe the Colts and Saints have, but that's it.
Originally posted by NinerFan408:
Originally posted by Marvin49:
I think it's because those teams aren't as good as their record would indicate.
The home advantage is good for an extera win or 2 every year but when they get into the playoffs they don't get that advantage all the way through. When those teams have to play one of the big boys without the crowd behind them they crumble.
There is a reason why up until the Colts won a few years ago that no team that plays its home games in a dome had ever won the Super Bowl. Now I believe the Colts and Saints have, but that's it.
Um the 1999-2000 Rams?
Originally posted by Marvin49:
oops...but they only won one of those.