Spur of the moment
Frederic Kanoute
You are right but where Wembley is concerned other factors surely come into it, and this would have been more pronounced at the start of the season.We've lost once at 'home' this season. We have drawn too many games we should win which isnt the first time this has been an issue. You can claim we aren't playing at home all you like, when you have 70,000 plus fans supporting you on a pitch thats a real advantage no matter where you are playing....
70k or no, it certainly does not feel like home, and that's because it isn't. At the start of the season it was all still relatively unfamiliar both to the players and the fans. To some extent our results both last season and at the start of this, certainly reflected that. The moment you acknowledge that playing at home, ie your real home offers an advantage, you must then also concede that playing in an unfamiliar surrounding that you are obliged to call your temporary home cannot quite be the same thing. You only had to listen to the disjointed / fragmented chanting around the stadium to get an idea of the effect it has had.
Whereas to visiting teams you would expect Wembley to present that much more of a special occasion, a once off and one they would want to rise to. Yes it can also work the other way for some but imo it surely remains a factor.
The fact that our Wembley results are steadily improving over time tends also to reinforce the suggestion that we are now at last getting a feel for the place. Hopefully that will continue to improve as the season goes on.
We'll then have to start all over again next season when we'll need to refamiliarise ourselves with WHL and make another completely different stadium start to feel like home.