GenericYesMan
Junior
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2017
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From Greentree:
From the HC office:
From the HC office:
Last edited:
when is this scheduled to be completed?
Will it be ready by August practice when we typically lose 3 or 4 practices due to lightening?
Will it be ready by August practice when we typically lose 3 or 4 practices due to lightening?
It should be
You don’t either, just going by what Blake James have said that it should be done before August smart a55Will it be ready by August practice when we typically lose 3 or 4 practices due to lightening?
It should be
You have no idea
How much of a footprint does this take out of the current Greentree practice area? Any negative whatsoever with that? I wonder if practices will move indoors if it gets too hot (meaning virtually every afternoon in the summer)? Or, used just when it rains?
I don't think they'll move inside when it's hot. That's the home field advantage. This thing is all about the lightning warnings they have all the time.
I don't think they'll move inside when it's hot. That's the home field advantage. This thing is all about the lightning warnings they have all the time.
It absolutely impacts games. ND showed serious adjustment issues to the humidity (and it wasn't even all that hot that night) and Syracuse looked worn down by the end of the game. You also see it in the NFL, with teams running out of gas against the Dolphins in September/October games at Hard Rock.
Teams from less humid climates absolutely have adjustment issues. The air is just really, really heavy and tests a team's conditioning.
I don't think they'll move inside when it's hot. That's the home field advantage. This thing is all about the lightning warnings they have all the time.
Couple cases of heatstroke and ... ya never know. Also, I really haven't see the "home field advantage" of training in high hunmidity much anymore. Opponents seem to have no more heat-related game problems than we do.
I don't think they'll move inside when it's hot. That's the home field advantage. This thing is all about the lightning warnings they have all the time.
It absolutely impacts games. ND showed serious adjustment issues to the humidity (and it wasn't even all that hot that night) and Syracuse looked worn down by the end of the game. You also see it in the NFL, with teams running out of gas against the Dolphins in September/October games at Hard Rock.
Teams from less humid climates absolutely have adjustment issues. The air is just really, really heavy and tests a team's conditioning.
I don't know the extent to which it affects players, but it absolutely has some. When the humidity is high your sweat doesn't evaporate as quickly and it's harder to cool your body off. There can be significant performance losses due to increased body temp. Our guys train in that humidity, so their bodies have time to adapt to it which lessens the impact.
Easy to say we have a "heat" advantage when we win like we did against ND. I didn't see Toledo or Syracuse (the two games I saw) struggling. We had just as many guys cramping up/looking beat as they did.