Experimental effects of an absent crowd on performances and refereeing decisions during COVID-19

The Covid-19 pandemic has induced worldwide natural experiments on the effects of crowds. We exploit one of these experiments currently taking place over several countries in almost identical settings: professional football matches played behind closed doors. We find large and statistically significant effects on the number of yellow cards issued by referees. Without a crowd, fewer cards were awarded to the away teams, reducing home advantage. These results have implications for the influence of social pressure and crowds on the neutrality of refereeing decisions.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games
Tagging:Coronavirus
Published in:Discussion Paper Series
Language:English
Published: Institute of Labour Economics 2020
Online Access:http://ftp.iza.org/dp13578.pdf
Pages:13578
Document types:electronical publication
Level:advanced