Also, semi-related question here, and I'm honestly just asking - I have never been to Mackey. Is its "built-in" advantages really
that material compared to SFC? The roof appears lower, but it's still a dome. The slope appears a little less gradual in the lower bowl but honestly not by that much. I tried to find two pictures from a similar angle:
I think our fans sort of overrate how much SFC has going against it that we the fans must simply overcome, haha. It's still an old building with a concrete roof, and that place can get loud as hell. I have heard folks say something about the metal bleachers at Mackey helping with noise, and obviously the proportion of their crowd that is students is far superior to ours and helps. However, and again admitting that I have never been there, I just don't see THAT much of a difference between the two building designs that just destines us to have an arena that is always less loud. Seems to me it's more of a fan issue.
P.S. As a total nerd about this stuff, I really wish there was any kind of data/information out there about which stands were the steepest and most gradual. Obviously just using our eyeballs, we can all identify places like the Rose Bowl as really gradual and places like Indiana's Assembly Hall are steep. However, I would love to see a list of Big Ten basketball arenas by rise-over-run ratios or whatever. My perception of the three I have been in are that Carver is by far the steepest (pretty much just one steep angle from the first row to the top), SFC is a mixed bag (A Section seems gradual, B Section seems sort of standard and C Section actually seems pretty steep) and Northwestern is the most gradual (as I think most newer stadiums are due to regulations).