Saturday evenings where the crispy green turf can be used for something other than just practices. Whereas players put what they learned throughout practices and experience in the sport and use it all as knowledge for the games on Saturday. The only time that the throw of the pigskin is really accounted for. A location where the intensity and excitement spreads throughout the team players and fans in the stands. The smell of wrinkled hotdogs, juicy cheese burgers, and extra cheesy nachos arousing the microscopic hairs in my nostrils. Everyone is anxiously waiting every Saturday for pig to fly in the opening quarter and faintly praying for their team to win during the national anthem. Sitting on the icy cold steal bleachers with nice breezes …show more content…
During the four consecutive weeks at the football field I have witnessed many different things. I have witnessed family members, fans, and students going out to support the home team and away team for the victory of the game. Most of my observations were made walking along the stands and pinpointing which team each individual was routing for and also making educated evaluations on how many people attended the game in total. Many of my observations were made easier when people in the stands wore clothing representing the school. I could tell if a person was part of the opposing team when they cheered when the opponent does something good in the game or they believe the referee makes a bad call against them. How I was able to get these assumptions were by the screaming, loud clapping, and when they standing up for a good play on the field. While at the game I had interviewed people with questions such as: Is there a specific reason or person why you attend these games? would you watch these games I there wasn’t? Do you think the football record has anything to do with the attendance in the games? Have you ever attended another division three football game from another university? If yes, where their more people there than there is