Wave (audience)

Australia vs Ireland international rules game 2014 at Subiaco Oval crowd wave
Crowd wave at the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup

The wave (known as a Mexican wave or stadium wave outside of North America) is a type of metachronal rhythm achieved in a packed stadium when successive groups of spectators briefly stand, yell, and raise their arms. Immediately upon stretching to full height, the spectator returns to the usual seated position.

The result is a wave of standing spectators that travels through the crowd, even though individual spectators never move away from their seats. In many large arenas the crowd is seated in a contiguous circuit all the way around the sport field, and so the wave is able to travel continuously around the arena; in discontiguous seating arrangements, the wave can instead reflect back and forth through the crowd. When the gap in seating is narrow, the wave can sometimes pass through it. Usually only one wave crest will be present at any given time in an arena, although simultaneous, counter-rotating waves have been produced.[1]

The wave appeared in US sports events in the late 1970s to early 1980s, and began to be adopted internationally after broadcast coverage of the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico, leading to the act being known as a "Mexican wave" in some countries.

  1. ^ Geoff (9 September 2008). "The Hoover Street Rag: How To Do the Wave at Michigan Stadium". hooverstreetrag.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2010.

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