It has been a long-held belief that NFL teams that usually play their home games in a dome, do worse in the playoffs when they have to play outdoors. Thus making home field advantage (HFA) even more important for dome teams. It's also been a go-to reason as to why Drew Brees and Peyton Manning play worse outdoors, especially late in their career in cold weather.
I used the home/away results from the past 13 seasons (not including the 2020 season-to-date), and flagged whether each team played their home games in a dome or not.
The overall HFA has been 2.41 points per game - games in a dome have been slightly higher, at 2.68 points per game, with games in open air (outdoors) stadiums at 2.29 points per game.
Dome teams specifically have faired even worse when playing in an open air stadium - losing by 2.64 points, on average. However, open air teams playing other open air teams see an HFA of 2.29 - so the difference between the two is the incremental difference for dome teams: 0.34 points per game, which is significant across 3,161 games.
For a final wrinkle, I also looked at teams that moved within their market between dome/open air stadiums. So teams like the Atlanta Falcons (moved from dome to dome in 2017) and Los Angeles Rams (moved from St. Louis to LA in 2016) don't count.
Blue: Open; Green: Dome |
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