Quote ="Call Me God"England prop James Graham: "I've played in some massive games, [usome hostile atmospheres[/u and some great crowds - the first game back at the new Wembley and all that - [ubut never anything like this before[/u.
The Tongans were cheering the Tongans.......I didn't see one Tongan fan cheer the English and I was there......!
It's all kicked off in Auckland now with the Tongan community taking to the streets en-masse to protest being robbed by the referee...Lead story on news bulletins here
[urlhttps://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/league/99262289/tongan-league-fans-march-in-auckland-angry-over-semifinal-loss-to-england[/url
[urlhttps://www.facebook.com/events/1806893626064241/?active_tab=about[/url
[urlhttp://www.newshub.co.nz/home/sport/2017/11/rugby-league-world-cup-thousands-of-tongan-fans-sign-petition-calling-for-referee-explanation.html[/url
[urlhttp://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2017/11/that-s-not-on-tongan-leader-on-protests-petitions-after-world-cup-loss.html[/url'"
You don't know much about sport psychology do you?
Ask any sportsperson, even at the lower grades but more so at the top end of the pile and pretty much all of them will say they don't really notice the crowd when they are engaged in what they are doing.
Sure when you're standing having a breather you'll hear it and see it but it's just noise, it's not intimidating per-se but if you're not used to the noise and/or the occasion it can effect you, not in an intimidating way but it can make you realise the enormity of the occasion, that is usually down to lack of experience/simple mental discipline.
Once you're in the thick of it you're too focused on what you are doing (or should be) to acknowledge the crowd at all.