There are a few other people who agree with the Maine player::lol: Yeah I hear those montana games are real loud, maybe the sheep getting stooped are but other than that I just dont hear many talk about the crowd noise in Montana."Actually, I think Montana was the loudest place I've ever played," Knox said. "I never expected to be playing at Nebraska. It won't be mind-blowing."
Knox is a safety/linebacker for Maine.
Maybe Nebraska needs to change his mind for him, huh? :thumbs
homeboy is in for a real treat i hope he brings some ear plugs :horns2
Joe Gardi, coach of Hofstra:
Gardi QuoteAny college football fan worth his or her salt knows The Swamp in Florida is "the loudest, most obnoxious and notorious piece of real estate in college football"; that a game at Notre Dame is an almost religious experience; that at LSU's Death Valley the crowd can get so loud it once set off the seismograph in the school's geology department.
"I'll tell you what," says Joe Gardi, who has brought his Hofstra Pride to Missoula three times (and, he's proud to say, won once). "I coached in the NFL (with the New York Jets) for 10 years and I know what crowd noise is. I coached at Maryland, I played at Maryland in 19-none-of-your-business, I've played at Texas, Auburn, LSU, Clemson, in some of the greatest stadiums in the country. I mean, at LSU they used to prod the tiger with an electric shock to get him to roar when you came on the field, and it was just unbelievable to a visiting player."
And?
"In comparison, Montana is a tougher place to play."
Gardi explains.
"Because it's so closed in. The noise is so confined. My granddaughter got so scared in that place - she was 7 years old - she never let go of her mother for the whole first quarter.
and from the USA today (before the stadium was expanded):
USA TodayAmplify their noise in the concrete bowl that's Washington-Grizzly Stadium, throw in gusts and swirls of wind out of Hellgate Canyon to the east, add a touch of Montana winter nastiness — particularly when a southern team is in for the playoffs — and it's one of the sport's more daunting venues.
Not that it should really make any difference to Husker fans, but after the game when they ask if the crowd intimidated the Maine players don't be surprised if they say they were prepared for it by playing in Montana.