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The '''12th man''' is a term commonly used to describe the [[Fan (person)|fans]] within a [[stadium]] during [[American football]] or [[Association football]] (soccer) games. Since most football leagues allow a maximum of eleven players per team on the playing field at a time, the term denotes the attempt of a team's fans to help their team. The term is trademarked by and originated with [[Texas A&M University]] in 1922.
==Welcome==
Hello, '''Mondeo''', and [[Wikipedia:Welcome, newcomers|welcome]] to Wikipedia. Thank you for [[Special:Contributions/Mondeo|your contributions]]. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. If you are stuck, and looking for help, please come to the '''[[Wikipedia:New contributors' help page|New contributors' help page]]''', where experienced Wikipedians can answer any queries you have! Or, you can just type '''<code><nowiki>{{helpme}}</nowiki></code>''' and your question on this page, and someone will show up shortly to answer. Here are a few good links for newcomers:
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We hope you enjoy editing here and being a [[Wikipedia:Wikipedians|Wikipedian]]! By the way, you can sign your name on talk and vote pages using four tildes, like this: &#126;&#126;&#126;&#126;. If you have any questions, see the [[Wikipedia:Help|help pages]], add a question to the [[Wikipedia:village pump|village pump]] or ask me on my talk page. Again, welcome! --[[User:Philip Baird Shearer|Philip Baird Shearer]] ([[User talk:Philip Baird Shearer|talk]]) 13:03, 29 August 2008 (UTC)


Due to the very nature of fans, their mere presence can have profound impacts on how the teams perform. Namely, the home team fans would like to see their team win the game. Thus these fans will often create loud sounds or [[football chant|chant]] in hopes of distracting, demoralizing and confusing the opposing team while they have [[possession]] of the ball; or to persuade a referee to make a favorable decision. Noises are made by shouting, whistling, stomping and various other techniques.
== Hi :-) ==


== History ==
Hey there,
[[Image:12thManStatue.JPG|right|thumb|12th Man Statue on Texas A&M University campus]]
The first recorded instance of the term "12th Man" being used was to describe [[E. King Gill]] and his actions in [[Dallas]] on [[January 2]], [[1922]], at the [[Dixie Classic]], the forerunner of the [[Cotton Bowl (game)|Cotton Bowl]]. Texas A&M played defending national champion [[Centre College]] in the first post-season game in the southwest. In this hard fought game, which produced national publicity, an underdog Aggie team was slowly but surely defeating a team which boasted three [[All-America]]ns. Unfortunately, the first half produced so many injuries for A&M that [[Dana X. Bible|Coach D. X. Bible]] feared he wouldn’t have enough men to finish the game. At that moment, he called into the [[Texas Aggie|Aggie]] section of the stands for E. King Gill, a reserve who had left football after the regular season to play basketball. Gill, who was spotting players and was not in football uniform, willingly volunteered and donned the uniform of injured player Heine Weir. When the game ended with an A&M victory, 22-14, E. King Gill was the only man left standing on the sidelines for the Aggies. Gill later said, "I wish I could say that I went in and ran for the winning touchdown, but I did not. I simply stood by in case my team needed me."<ref name="beano">{{cite web|last=Cook|first=Beano|title=Ten Days That Shook the Sport|publisher=Espn.Com|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=2615391|date=[[October 8]], [[2006]]|accessdate=2007-07-26}}</ref> Although he did not actually play in the game, his readiness to play was noted. Since there were 11 men on the field, E. King Gill was the 12th Man, hence the term.


== Texas A&M tradition ==
Just wanted to say hi, and I appreciate your contributions over at the Srebrenica Massacre page (hell of an article to choose to get involved with! ;-)
{{see also|Traditions of Texas A&M University}}
[[Image:Homeofthe12thMan.jpg|thumb|left|The Texas A&M student section of [[Kyle Field]] stands the entire game to show support for the [[college football|football]] team]]
Current Texas A&M students call themselves the 12th Man, meaning they are there to support the 11 players on the field and are eligible and ready to enter the game if the events of 1922 were to be repeated. To further symbolize their "readiness, desire, and enthusiasm", the entire student body stands throughout the game. A statue of E. King Gill stands to the north of [[Kyle Field]] to remind Aggies of their constant obligation to preserve the spirit of the 12th Man.<ref name="beano"/> Beginning in 1988, fans also began waving 12th Man Towels during the game to show their support. The tradition of towels started in 1985 when coach Jackie Sherrill's 12th man squad began carrying them to motivate the student body in the stands. In the 1988 Cotton Bowl game vs Notre Dame the Notre Dame players began stealing the 12th man team members towels during each kick off. During that game Warren Barhorst, a member of Sherrill's 12th Man Kickoff Team, tackled [[Heisman Trophy]] winner [[Tim Brown]], and then retialated by grabbing Brown's towel and waved it over his head. An infuriated Brown tackled Barhorst, earning himself two {{convert|15|yd|m|sing=on}} unsportsmanlike conduct penalties and ejection from the game. During the 1985-1986 football season, students began waving their own white towels, and now the towels are ubiquitous.<ref name="12th man towel">{{cite news|last=Burson|first=Rusty |url = http://12thmanfoundation.com/mag/Vol5/vol5no05/aggieflashback.html |title = Aggie Flashback by Rusty Burson |accessdate = 2007-02-13 |date = [[2006-06-01]] |format = HTML |publisher = 12th Man Foundation}}</ref>


Because the students are always waiting for the opportunity to support their team, they are also willing to take the credit for the team's good deeds. A popular Aggie tradition is that "when the team scores, everybody scores."<ref name="nissimov">{{citation|last=Nissimov|first=Ron|title=A Salute to 125 Years: A&M celebrates Corps of Cadets|url=http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl?id=2001_3334627|newspaper=Houston Chronicle|date=[[September 16]], [[2001]]|accessdate=2007-08-16}}</ref> Whenever the [[Texas Aggies|Aggies]] score points during the game, students kiss their dates.<ref name="nissimov"/>
Actually it would be great to have some neutral involvement over there, as IMHO the page has some serious issues with pro-Bosniak bias... Of course, the Bosniak editors think I'm an extreme Serbian nationalist! (Although I'm not Serbian, for starters... I just don't think ANY article, however 'sensitive' a topic, shouldn't be dealt with in an even-handed and factual way.)


In the spirit of the original 12th Man, the football coach [[Jackie Sherrill]] created the "12th Man Kickoff Team" in the 1980s composed of non-athletic scholarship students who tried out for the team instead of players who were recruited, as is the normal practice in college football. Coach Sherrill has written a book entitled "No Experience Required" which details this team and the tradition. These students were placed on the roster for the sole purpose of kickoffs. Each player was given a number to wear (at the time [[NCAA]] regulations did not prohibit more than one person on the field with the same number) and nicknamed "the suicide squad," many kick return teams feared the walk-on students who were determined to leave their mark in Aggie lore; these students often had little regard for their safety and were determined to make a tackle at any cost.<ref>http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2008/09/29/Sports/12th-Man.Honors.Sherrill-3457944.shtml?reffeature=textemailedition</ref><ref name=NBCref>{{cite news|title=NBC Evening News|publisher=NBC|url=http://openweb.tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/1983-9/1983-09-02-NBC-12.html|date=[[1983-09-02]]}}</ref> 12th Man kickoff team performed very well and held opponents to one of the lowest yards per return averages in the league.<ref name="12thMan">{{cite web |url = http://aggietraditions.tamu.edu/12thman.shtml |title = Twelfth Man |accessdate = 2006-12-31 |date = |publisher = Aggie Traditions }}</ref> Later, head coach [[R. C. Slocum]] changed the team to allow only one representative of the 12th Man on the kick off team who wears uniform number 12.<ref name="beano"/> The player is chosen based on the level of determination and hard work shown in practices. However under Dennis Franchione the "12th Man Kickoff Team", entirely made up of walk-ons, was brought back, though used only rarely when the team is up by quite a few points. <ref name="Kickoff">{{cite news |url = http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?section=sports&id=3452486 |title = McNeil sets Aggie offense record in win over SMU |accessdate = 2006-12-31 |date = [[2005-09-17]] |format = HTML |publisher = ABC 13 News }}</ref><ref name="heater">{{citation|last=Heater|first=Jay|title=LaMantia A&M's main 12th Man|newspaper=[[Oakland Tribune]]|date=[[December 27]], [[2006]]|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4176/is_20061227/ai_n17077154|accessdate=2007-07-26}}</ref>
Anyway I'm not trying to bad-mouth the others over there, I don't have anything personal against them in any case, and I'm sure you will come to your own views. But I'll probably be a bit more inclined to contribute over there if you're around. As it is, I find the atmosphere toxic and can't really take more than a week or so of editing before I need several months' break :-)


== Use in American football ==
Kind regards [[User:Jonathanmills|Jonathanmills]] ([[User talk:Jonathanmills|talk]]) 23:30, 1 September 2008 (UTC)


The "12th man" term has been used by various American football teams including the [[NFL]]'s [[Seattle Seahawks]], [[Green Bay Packers]], [[Buffalo Bills]], [[Denver Broncos]], and [[Chicago Bears]] in reference to their supporters, though the Bears no longer use the term "12th man" at the request of Texas A&M. The Buffalo Bills, and Seattle Seahawks continue to use the phrase. The Chicago Bears now use the term "The Fourth Phase" referring to the fans contribution toward victory along with the contributions of the other 3 phases namely offense, defense and special teams.
:My pleasure. Personally I don't have any view on this event or the article, I am not from these countries and have no special relation to any country in the region. I am a social scientist and interested in getting the facts straight and presenting facts in a neutral frame. Regards, [[User:Mondeo|Mondeo]] ([[User talk:Mondeo#top|talk]]) 13:38, 2 September 2008 (UTC)


As a tribute to their fans, the Seahawks [[Retired number|retired]] the number 12 during a game on [[December 15]] [[1984]]. Since then #12 Jerseys have been sold by the team and worn by Seahawk fans, often with the name "Fan" on the back. The Seahawks also have a ceremony before each home game where a flag bearing the #12 is raised by a prominent individual.
::Well, that is pretty much my stance -- although I do have some knowledge of the 'revisionist' claims, I'm not fighting for the article to be an exercise in them. I just object to the overtly anti-Serb tone (and often inaccurate information) contained in the article. Will be great to have your input.


The [[Buffalo Bills]] have honored their 12th man by inducting them into the Buffalo Bills Wall of Fame inside the Ralph Wilson Stadium. They were inducted in 1992 because of their loyal support during the team's early 90's [[Super Bowl]] runs. The name "12th Man" still is on The Wall today.
::PS, I just responded to your post re the final paragraph on the talk page -- namely, what did you object to/ feel uncertain about vis-a-vis that text? (Reply on the talk page) Cheers [[User:Jonathanmills|Jonathanmills]] ([[User talk:Jonathanmills|talk]]) 20:07, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
They are the true founders of the 12th man.


== Texas A&M trademark issues and Seattle Seahawks lawsuit ==
== October 2008 ==
[[Image:Information.svg|25px]] Welcome to Wikipedia. Although everyone is welcome to contribute constructively to the encyclopedia, adding content without [[Wikipedia:Citing sources|citing]] a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]]{{#if:Horseshoe curve (transportation)|, as you did to [[:Horseshoe curve (transportation)]],}} is not consistent with our policy of [[Wikipedia:Verifiability|verifiability]]. Take a look at the [[Wikipedia:Introduction|welcome page]] to learn more about contributing to this encyclopedia. If you are familiar with [[Wikipedia:Citing sources]], please take this opportunity to add references to the article. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}}<!-- Template:uw-unsourced1 --> [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 23:00, 7 October 2008 (UTC)


The term "12th Man" was coined and marketed to represent the Texas Aggie fans after the 1922 Dixie Classic. While intellectual property laws recognize such common law uses in trademark disputes, the official registration of the mark was not filed by Texas A&M (U.S. Reg. No. 1948306) until September of 1990, and later significantly bolstered by the passage of the Federal Dilution Trademark Act of 1995.<!--This trademark was filed in 1990, though it was not fully enacted until the passage of this law. Retroactively, this trademark, and many like it, were enacted--> This law allowed Texas A&M to use potential damage to the trademark through dilution as a justification in its lawsuit against the Seattle Seahawks. According to statements made by Texas A&M officials, they sent requests to stop using the phrase to the Seattle Seahawks (2004, 2005), Buffalo Bills (undated), and the Chicago Bears (undated). Both the Bills and the Bears responded to the requests stating they would no longer use the phrase, however the Seahawks failed to respond to the request.
Well, I assumed that common knowledge could be added without source. Anyway, I have added references to reliable sources in the linked article. Regards, [[User:Mondeo|Mondeo]] ([[User talk:Mondeo#top|talk]]) 14:56, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

In January 2006, Texas A&M filed suit against the [[Seattle Seahawks]] to protect the trademark and in May 2006, the dispute was settled out of court. In the agreement, Texas A&M licensed the Seahawks to continue using the phrase "12th Man" in exchange for a licensing fee and public acknowledgement by the NFL franchise as to Texas A&M's ownership of the phrase.<ref>{{cite web|title='12th Man' for everyone: Seattle, A&M resolve dispute|publisher=ESPN.Com|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2437992|date=[[May 8]], [[2006]]|accessdate=2007-07-26}}</ref>

== Use in Association football (soccer)==

[[Image:DC12thmanontour.JPG|thumb|right|200px|[[Derry City FC|Derry City's]] twelfth man in [[Paris]], [[France]].]]
The term "twelfth man" is commonly used in [[association football]] to refer to the [[Association football culture#Fans|fans]] and occasionally to the [[coach (sport)|manager]]. [[Stockport County fans]] are registered as official members of their squad with the number 12. [[Portsmouth F.C.]] has also retired its number 12 shirt, and lists the club's supporters, "Pompey Fans", as player number 12 on the squad list printed in home match programmes. Number 12 is also reserved for the fans at [[FC Zenit Saint Petersburg|Zenit Saint Petersburg]] in Russia and so do [[Plymouth Argyle F.C.|Plymouth Argyle]] from England, [[Grimsby Town F.C.|Grimsby Town]] from England [[AIK Fotboll|AIK]] from Sweden and [[Odense Boldklub]], also known as [[Odense Boldklub|OB]], in Denmark. [[Dynamo Dresden]] in Germany also keeps number 12 for their fans, as well as the official team anthem being "We are the 12th man". [[Aberdeen FC]] supporters commonly display a large banner in the shape of a football shirt with the text "Red Army 12" in place of a player's name and number. The fans of the [[Northern Ireland national football team]] and [[Derry City F.C.|Derry City]] are referred to as the twelfth man as well. In the [[Football League of Ireland]] [[Cork City F.C.]] were the first and so far only team to officially retire the number 12 jersey for the fans. The most vociferous fans of [[Boca Juniors]] in [[Argentina]] are known as "La Doce" or "The Twelfth." On [[September 18]] [[2004]], [[U.S. Lecce]], an Italian team currently in [[Serie B]], retired the number 12 to the fans, which was handed to them by the former captain [[Cristian Ledesma]]. They symbolically represent a 12th Man in the field. [http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unione_Sportiva_Lecce#Tifoseria]

== Effects ==
The effects of the "12th man" vary widely, but can be put in two categories. The first is
simply psychological, the effect of showing the home team that they are appreciated, and
showing the away team that they are somewhat unwelcome. The second seems far more important,
and it directly relates to the deafening effects of a loud crowd.

Fans are most incited by physical play, especially good plays made by the defense.<ref
name=boling/>

The home team can derive energy from the loud noise of their fans. Former players have
described the feeling of their adrenaline pumping after hearing the fans yell, which is "like
you have a reserve energy tank."<ref name=baldinger/>

The noise of the crowd can have a significant impact on the players on the field. In American
football, an extremely loud crowd can prevent the [[offensive linemen]] from hearing the [[snap count]]. This can have the effect of making the player slower to react when the ball is
snapped, and his eventual response may be weaker than normal because each play is begun "with
some indecision and doubt."<ref name=baldinger>{{citation|last=Baldinger|first=Brian|title=Gaps
in action can kill home-field edge|newspaper=The Sporting News|date=[[January 12]],
[[2004]]|accessdate=2007-09-11|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1208/is_2_228/ai_112168652}}</ref> The noise can also prevent players from hearing [[American football|audible]]s
and can make it difficult for the team's offense to coordinate plays in the huddle. The effect
of the noise can often be measured in mistakes, such as [[false start]] penalties.<ref
name=acee>{{citation|last=Acee|first=Kevin|title=They're right on Q|newspaper=[[The San Diego Tribune]]|date=[[December 26]],
[[2006]]|url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20061226/news_1s26chargers.html|accessdate
=2007-09-11}}</ref>
A series of remarkable victories by the [[Northern Ireland national football team]] over many of Europe's major footballing nations during the period since 2005 was credited in no small part to the passionate, colourful and vocal support of their fans, known as the Green and White Army.

Coaches can take steps to minimize the effect of the crowd noise on their teams. Some teams
bring large speakers to their practice fields and broadcast loud noises such as jet engines to
prepare their teams for the anticipated noise level.<ref name=fryer>{{citation|last=Fryer|first=Jenna|title=Panthers thrive in hostile settings|newspaper=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]|date=[[January 21]], [[2006]]|accessdate-2007-09-11|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_20060121/ai_n16024727}}</ref> Crowd noise tends to diminish after a long lull in play, such as a pause for [[instant replay]]. Former [[NFL]] player [[Brian Baldinger]] speculates that some coaches draw out reviews as part of a coaching strategy to quiet the crowd for their next play.<ref name=baldinger/>

The [[New York Giants]] allegedly asked the [[NFL]] to intervene in 2006 when they played the
[[Seattle Seahawks]]. In their 2005 matchup at [[Qwest Field]], the Giants incurred 11 false
start penalties due to the crowd noise. For the 2006 rematch between the two teams, the NFL
sent observers to verify that the Seahawks were not artificially enhancing the noise level.<ref
name=boling>{{citation|last=Boling|first=Dave|title=Artificial noise? Much ado about Hawks'
12th Man|url=http://dwb.thenewstribune.com/sports/seahawks/story/6109599p-5353332c.html|newspaper=The News Tribune|location=[[Tacoma, Washington]]|date=[[September 21]], [[2006]]|accessdate=2007-09-11}}</ref> Qwest Field in Seattle has been architecturally designed to be the loudest stadium in the NFL. This has caused 2.83 false starts per game, which is the highest in the NFL since 2005. The Decibel level at Qwest Field is a whopping 112 dB, only 18 dB below the roar of a Boeing 747. <ref>[http://www.seahawks.com/12Zone/12Zone.aspx?id=68058 Seattle Seahawks - 12 Zone : Qwest Field: The Loudest Stadium in the NFL<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Sometimes, the sideline is also referred to as the "12th man" or "12th defender". Since a
player is considered down when he steps out of bounds, the sideline effectively acts as an
extra defender. This usage is less common than the one referring to the fans.

In [[Association Football]] (soccer), the crowd is often loud throughout the match - for
example before kickoff ([[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] fans singing [[You'll Never Walk Alone (song)|You'll Never Walk Alone]]
as the players run out); during the buildup to and scoring of a [[Goal (sport)|goal]]; when
encouraging the team to come back from defeat; to discourage an opposition penalty taker; or to
harass a [[referee]] giving a free kick to the opposition team.

A researcher from [[Harvard University]] discovered in a study that some association football
referees appeared to be impacted by crowd noise. His studies revealed that a home team
acquired an additional 0.1&nbsp;goal advantage for every 10,000&nbsp;fans in the stadium.<ref
name=bbc>{{citation|title=Study reveals referees' home bias|publisher=BBC
News|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/6629397.stm|date=[[May 6]],
[[2007]]|accessdate=2007-09-11}}</ref>

[[Delia Smith]], [[Norwich City F.C.|Norwich City]]'s joint major shareholder, received some
notoriety when, seemingly under the influence of alcohol, she took to the pitch during the half
time interval, with a microphone in hand and [[Sky TV]] cameras in tow, to tell fans the side
"need their twelfth man." "Where are you?" she cried. In the end it had little effect and
[[Norwich City F.C.|Norwich City]] lost the game in the dying seconds.<ref>{{cite web | title =
Delia Smith BBC interview | url
=http://www.bbc.co.uk/norfolk/content/articles/2005/03/02/sport_delia_smith_interview_20050302_feature.shtml | accessmonthday=11 May | accessyear = 2006 }}</ref>

== See also ==
*[[Sixth man]]

== References ==

{{reflist}}
*[http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/3849902.html A&M, Seahawks settle 12th man flap] - Story on 12th Man Lawsuit Settlement

== External links ==
* [http://www.tamu.edu/singing_cadets/schoolsongs.htm School Songs] of [http://www.tamu.edu/singing_cadets/index.html The Texas A&M Singing Cadets] include the lyrics to ''The Twelfth Man Song''.

[[Category:Football (soccer) culture]]
[[Category:Football (soccer) terminology]]
[[Category:American football terminology]]
[[Category:Texas A&M Aggies football]]
[[Category:Seattle Seahawks]]
[[Category:Texas A&M University traditions]]

Revision as of 14:57, 10 October 2008

The 12th man is a term commonly used to describe the fans within a stadium during American football or Association football (soccer) games. Since most football leagues allow a maximum of eleven players per team on the playing field at a time, the term denotes the attempt of a team's fans to help their team. The term is trademarked by and originated with Texas A&M University in 1922.

Due to the very nature of fans, their mere presence can have profound impacts on how the teams perform. Namely, the home team fans would like to see their team win the game. Thus these fans will often create loud sounds or chant in hopes of distracting, demoralizing and confusing the opposing team while they have possession of the ball; or to persuade a referee to make a favorable decision. Noises are made by shouting, whistling, stomping and various other techniques.

History

File:12thManStatue.JPG
12th Man Statue on Texas A&M University campus

The first recorded instance of the term "12th Man" being used was to describe E. King Gill and his actions in Dallas on January 2, 1922, at the Dixie Classic, the forerunner of the Cotton Bowl. Texas A&M played defending national champion Centre College in the first post-season game in the southwest. In this hard fought game, which produced national publicity, an underdog Aggie team was slowly but surely defeating a team which boasted three All-Americans. Unfortunately, the first half produced so many injuries for A&M that Coach D. X. Bible feared he wouldn’t have enough men to finish the game. At that moment, he called into the Aggie section of the stands for E. King Gill, a reserve who had left football after the regular season to play basketball. Gill, who was spotting players and was not in football uniform, willingly volunteered and donned the uniform of injured player Heine Weir. When the game ended with an A&M victory, 22-14, E. King Gill was the only man left standing on the sidelines for the Aggies. Gill later said, "I wish I could say that I went in and ran for the winning touchdown, but I did not. I simply stood by in case my team needed me."[1] Although he did not actually play in the game, his readiness to play was noted. Since there were 11 men on the field, E. King Gill was the 12th Man, hence the term.

Texas A&M tradition

The Texas A&M student section of Kyle Field stands the entire game to show support for the football team

Current Texas A&M students call themselves the 12th Man, meaning they are there to support the 11 players on the field and are eligible and ready to enter the game if the events of 1922 were to be repeated. To further symbolize their "readiness, desire, and enthusiasm", the entire student body stands throughout the game. A statue of E. King Gill stands to the north of Kyle Field to remind Aggies of their constant obligation to preserve the spirit of the 12th Man.[1] Beginning in 1988, fans also began waving 12th Man Towels during the game to show their support. The tradition of towels started in 1985 when coach Jackie Sherrill's 12th man squad began carrying them to motivate the student body in the stands. In the 1988 Cotton Bowl game vs Notre Dame the Notre Dame players began stealing the 12th man team members towels during each kick off. During that game Warren Barhorst, a member of Sherrill's 12th Man Kickoff Team, tackled Heisman Trophy winner Tim Brown, and then retialated by grabbing Brown's towel and waved it over his head. An infuriated Brown tackled Barhorst, earning himself two 15-yard (14 m) unsportsmanlike conduct penalties and ejection from the game. During the 1985-1986 football season, students began waving their own white towels, and now the towels are ubiquitous.[2]

Because the students are always waiting for the opportunity to support their team, they are also willing to take the credit for the team's good deeds. A popular Aggie tradition is that "when the team scores, everybody scores."[3] Whenever the Aggies score points during the game, students kiss their dates.[3]

In the spirit of the original 12th Man, the football coach Jackie Sherrill created the "12th Man Kickoff Team" in the 1980s composed of non-athletic scholarship students who tried out for the team instead of players who were recruited, as is the normal practice in college football. Coach Sherrill has written a book entitled "No Experience Required" which details this team and the tradition. These students were placed on the roster for the sole purpose of kickoffs. Each player was given a number to wear (at the time NCAA regulations did not prohibit more than one person on the field with the same number) and nicknamed "the suicide squad," many kick return teams feared the walk-on students who were determined to leave their mark in Aggie lore; these students often had little regard for their safety and were determined to make a tackle at any cost.[4][5] 12th Man kickoff team performed very well and held opponents to one of the lowest yards per return averages in the league.[6] Later, head coach R. C. Slocum changed the team to allow only one representative of the 12th Man on the kick off team who wears uniform number 12.[1] The player is chosen based on the level of determination and hard work shown in practices. However under Dennis Franchione the "12th Man Kickoff Team", entirely made up of walk-ons, was brought back, though used only rarely when the team is up by quite a few points. [7][8]

Use in American football

The "12th man" term has been used by various American football teams including the NFL's Seattle Seahawks, Green Bay Packers, Buffalo Bills, Denver Broncos, and Chicago Bears in reference to their supporters, though the Bears no longer use the term "12th man" at the request of Texas A&M. The Buffalo Bills, and Seattle Seahawks continue to use the phrase. The Chicago Bears now use the term "The Fourth Phase" referring to the fans contribution toward victory along with the contributions of the other 3 phases namely offense, defense and special teams.

As a tribute to their fans, the Seahawks retired the number 12 during a game on December 15 1984. Since then #12 Jerseys have been sold by the team and worn by Seahawk fans, often with the name "Fan" on the back. The Seahawks also have a ceremony before each home game where a flag bearing the #12 is raised by a prominent individual.

The Buffalo Bills have honored their 12th man by inducting them into the Buffalo Bills Wall of Fame inside the Ralph Wilson Stadium. They were inducted in 1992 because of their loyal support during the team's early 90's Super Bowl runs. The name "12th Man" still is on The Wall today. They are the true founders of the 12th man.

Texas A&M trademark issues and Seattle Seahawks lawsuit

The term "12th Man" was coined and marketed to represent the Texas Aggie fans after the 1922 Dixie Classic. While intellectual property laws recognize such common law uses in trademark disputes, the official registration of the mark was not filed by Texas A&M (U.S. Reg. No. 1948306) until September of 1990, and later significantly bolstered by the passage of the Federal Dilution Trademark Act of 1995. This law allowed Texas A&M to use potential damage to the trademark through dilution as a justification in its lawsuit against the Seattle Seahawks. According to statements made by Texas A&M officials, they sent requests to stop using the phrase to the Seattle Seahawks (2004, 2005), Buffalo Bills (undated), and the Chicago Bears (undated). Both the Bills and the Bears responded to the requests stating they would no longer use the phrase, however the Seahawks failed to respond to the request.

In January 2006, Texas A&M filed suit against the Seattle Seahawks to protect the trademark and in May 2006, the dispute was settled out of court. In the agreement, Texas A&M licensed the Seahawks to continue using the phrase "12th Man" in exchange for a licensing fee and public acknowledgement by the NFL franchise as to Texas A&M's ownership of the phrase.[9]

Use in Association football (soccer)

Derry City's twelfth man in Paris, France.

The term "twelfth man" is commonly used in association football to refer to the fans and occasionally to the manager. Stockport County fans are registered as official members of their squad with the number 12. Portsmouth F.C. has also retired its number 12 shirt, and lists the club's supporters, "Pompey Fans", as player number 12 on the squad list printed in home match programmes. Number 12 is also reserved for the fans at Zenit Saint Petersburg in Russia and so do Plymouth Argyle from England, Grimsby Town from England AIK from Sweden and Odense Boldklub, also known as OB, in Denmark. Dynamo Dresden in Germany also keeps number 12 for their fans, as well as the official team anthem being "We are the 12th man". Aberdeen FC supporters commonly display a large banner in the shape of a football shirt with the text "Red Army 12" in place of a player's name and number. The fans of the Northern Ireland national football team and Derry City are referred to as the twelfth man as well. In the Football League of Ireland Cork City F.C. were the first and so far only team to officially retire the number 12 jersey for the fans. The most vociferous fans of Boca Juniors in Argentina are known as "La Doce" or "The Twelfth." On September 18 2004, U.S. Lecce, an Italian team currently in Serie B, retired the number 12 to the fans, which was handed to them by the former captain Cristian Ledesma. They symbolically represent a 12th Man in the field. [1]

Effects

The effects of the "12th man" vary widely, but can be put in two categories. The first is simply psychological, the effect of showing the home team that they are appreciated, and showing the away team that they are somewhat unwelcome. The second seems far more important, and it directly relates to the deafening effects of a loud crowd.

Fans are most incited by physical play, especially good plays made by the defense.[10]

The home team can derive energy from the loud noise of their fans. Former players have described the feeling of their adrenaline pumping after hearing the fans yell, which is "like you have a reserve energy tank."[11]

The noise of the crowd can have a significant impact on the players on the field. In American football, an extremely loud crowd can prevent the offensive linemen from hearing the snap count. This can have the effect of making the player slower to react when the ball is snapped, and his eventual response may be weaker than normal because each play is begun "with some indecision and doubt."[11] The noise can also prevent players from hearing audibles and can make it difficult for the team's offense to coordinate plays in the huddle. The effect of the noise can often be measured in mistakes, such as false start penalties.[12] A series of remarkable victories by the Northern Ireland national football team over many of Europe's major footballing nations during the period since 2005 was credited in no small part to the passionate, colourful and vocal support of their fans, known as the Green and White Army.

Coaches can take steps to minimize the effect of the crowd noise on their teams. Some teams bring large speakers to their practice fields and broadcast loud noises such as jet engines to prepare their teams for the anticipated noise level.[13] Crowd noise tends to diminish after a long lull in play, such as a pause for instant replay. Former NFL player Brian Baldinger speculates that some coaches draw out reviews as part of a coaching strategy to quiet the crowd for their next play.[11]

The New York Giants allegedly asked the NFL to intervene in 2006 when they played the Seattle Seahawks. In their 2005 matchup at Qwest Field, the Giants incurred 11 false start penalties due to the crowd noise. For the 2006 rematch between the two teams, the NFL sent observers to verify that the Seahawks were not artificially enhancing the noise level.[10] Qwest Field in Seattle has been architecturally designed to be the loudest stadium in the NFL. This has caused 2.83 false starts per game, which is the highest in the NFL since 2005. The Decibel level at Qwest Field is a whopping 112 dB, only 18 dB below the roar of a Boeing 747. [14]

Sometimes, the sideline is also referred to as the "12th man" or "12th defender". Since a player is considered down when he steps out of bounds, the sideline effectively acts as an extra defender. This usage is less common than the one referring to the fans.

In Association Football (soccer), the crowd is often loud throughout the match - for example before kickoff (Liverpool fans singing You'll Never Walk Alone as the players run out); during the buildup to and scoring of a goal; when encouraging the team to come back from defeat; to discourage an opposition penalty taker; or to harass a referee giving a free kick to the opposition team.

A researcher from Harvard University discovered in a study that some association football referees appeared to be impacted by crowd noise. His studies revealed that a home team acquired an additional 0.1 goal advantage for every 10,000 fans in the stadium.[15]

Delia Smith, Norwich City's joint major shareholder, received some notoriety when, seemingly under the influence of alcohol, she took to the pitch during the half time interval, with a microphone in hand and Sky TV cameras in tow, to tell fans the side "need their twelfth man." "Where are you?" she cried. In the end it had little effect and Norwich City lost the game in the dying seconds.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Cook, Beano (October 8, 2006). "Ten Days That Shook the Sport". Espn.Com. Retrieved 2007-07-26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Burson, Rusty (2006-06-01). "Aggie Flashback by Rusty Burson" (HTML). 12th Man Foundation. Retrieved 2007-02-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ a b Nissimov, Ron (September 16, 2001), "A Salute to 125 Years: A&M celebrates Corps of Cadets", Houston Chronicle, retrieved 2007-08-16 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2008/09/29/Sports/12th-Man.Honors.Sherrill-3457944.shtml?reffeature=textemailedition
  5. ^ "NBC Evening News". NBC. 1983-09-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "Twelfth Man". Aggie Traditions. Retrieved 2006-12-31.
  7. ^ "McNeil sets Aggie offense record in win over SMU" (HTML). ABC 13 News. 2005-09-17. Retrieved 2006-12-31. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ Heater, Jay (December 27, 2006), "LaMantia A&M's main 12th Man", Oakland Tribune, retrieved 2007-07-26 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ "'12th Man' for everyone: Seattle, A&M resolve dispute". ESPN.Com. May 8, 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. ^ a b Boling, Dave (September 21, 2006), "Artificial noise? Much ado about Hawks' 12th Man", The News Tribune, Tacoma, Washington, retrieved 2007-09-11 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |title= at position 41 (help)
  11. ^ a b c Baldinger, Brian (January 12, 2004), "Gaps in action can kill home-field edge", The Sporting News, retrieved 2007-09-11 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |date= at position 17 (help); line feed character in |title= at position 6 (help)
  12. ^ Acee, Kevin (December 26, 2006), "They're right on Q", The San Diego Tribune, retrieved 2007-09-11 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |date= at position 18 (help)
  13. ^ Fryer, Jenna (January 21, 2006), "Panthers thrive in hostile settings", Chicago Sun-Times {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Text "accessdate-2007-09-11" ignored (help)
  14. ^ Seattle Seahawks - 12 Zone : Qwest Field: The Loudest Stadium in the NFL
  15. ^ Study reveals referees' home bias, BBC News, May 6, 2007, retrieved 2007-09-11 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |date= at position 12 (help); line feed character in |publisher= at position 5 (help)
  16. ^ "Delia Smith BBC interview". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

External links