that place is a glorified high school stadium and you're trying to sell it as a fortress. the sound gets trapped because it's tiny and the acostics are weird, not because of some magical fan intensity. every fanbase claims their noise affects the o-line, but the reality is your conference record at home is mediocre against quality opponents. you call big stadiums libraries, but at least they're filled with actual history and championships, not just echoes. the new guys stepping in this spring need to feel a winning culture, not just a loud noise in a small bowl. real home field advantage is measured by wins, not decibels in a compact space. your fan support is inconsistent, and when the team hits a rough patch, that vaunted student section empties out by the third quarter. don't confuse a loud design with a true, sustained advantage. we've seen teams come into your place and operate just fine because the talent gap usually speaks louder than any trapped sound. focus on building a roster that can compete, not just a stadium that can get briefly loud.