POSTERBLITZ
  • Home
  • Request a Design
  • Blog
  • About
No Result
View All Result
POSTERBLITZ
  • Home
  • Request a Design
  • Blog
  • About
No Result
View All Result
POSTERBLITZ
No Result
View All Result

Losses of local soccer teams led to decrease in births after nine months

May 15, 2025
0
Share on Twitter

Soccer is a game that in many parts of the world is taken rather seriously. Perhaps we see the most intense emotional reactions in fans of this game, compared to any other, after their team wins or loses. An unexpected win or loss means that this reaction endures. But for how long?

Several newspapers have long conjectured a connection between unexpected “shock” events in sports, and fertility – the number of babies born approximately 9 months after the event. In February 2010, nine months after Andrés Iniesta of FC Barcelona scored a last minute (game-winning) goal against Chelsea FC in the UEFA Champions League semi finals, newspapers reported a 45% increase in child births in Catalonia. In a study that substantiated this fabled connection, Jesus Montesinos et al. found a 16 % increase (far from 45%, but still significant) in births.

“newspapers reported an increase in the number of births in Iceland nine months after the country unexpectedly beat England in the 2016 UEFA Europe Cup; in Germany in 2007 after its initially successful performance in the FIFA 2006 World Cup; and in England in 2003 after it reached the quarter-finals of FIFA World Cup in 2002”

Although a causal relationship between events in sports and fertility has not been established, it is speculated that heightened euphoria caused by unexpected victories can result in “celebratory intercourse.” There is some evidence  that winning or losing in elections or sports can lead to hormonal fluctuations (Bernardi, 2021). This results in increased libido following wins and decreased libido following losses, not only for contestants, but also emotionally invested supporters and fans.

You might also like

Being in a Crowd During Exciting Events Bond People Through “Identity Fusion”

Being in a Crowd During Exciting Events Bond People Through “Identity Fusion”

May 15, 2025
Caffeine as a Supplement Boosts Athletic Performance

Caffeine as a Supplement Boosts Athletic Performance

May 15, 2025

“This single goal (Iniesta, 2009) was so emotive that the skies over Catalonia reverberated with fireworks, shouts of joy, and the banging of pots and pans. According to some media reports, many fans also celebrated by making other kinds of noises”

– Montesinos et al., 2013

In a recent study, Fabrizio Bernardi and Marco Cozzani looked at whether unexpected results to local soccer games affected fertility in Spain (Spaniards take soccer very seriously). They obtained data from the internet on betting odds of every game of the Spanish major soccer league (la Liga, season 2000/2001 to season 2014/2015) and compared them against actual outcomes. This helps determine which of the games were “shock” events – unexpected wins or unexpected losses as opposed to expected wins/losses.

“It is not the simple level of gain or loss that drives individual mood, but the level compared to prior expectations of the outcome.”

They calculated the number of predicted and unpredicted wins/losses of favorite teams for each province in Spain, and examined correlations with monthly counts of births. Researchers found that one unexpected loss by the local team (“a defeat when the most popular team in the province was predicted to win with a probability >0.66”) led to a 0.8% decrease in the number of birth nine months later. However, they found no spike in births due to unexpected wins.

The researchers think that ‘loss aversion’ (Kahneman and Tversky 1979), the unequal effect of loss on human psyche compared to a win of similar magnitude, might account for the disparity. This means that unexpected losses were more likely to cause “sorrowful  abstention” (which was detectable) than unexpected wins were to cause “celebratory Intercourse” (which was not).

Read more about the study here.

Next Post

Suicides among Swedish men decreased after Viagra became more affordable

Recommended

Restricting meals to daytime may reduce diabetes risk in night shift workers

Restricting meals to daytime may reduce diabetes risk in night shift workers

May 15, 2025
Chimps, like humans, show signs of uncertainty when faced with a hard choice

Chimps, like humans, show signs of uncertainty when faced with a hard choice

April 29, 2025
Wearing a proper mask can keep the risk of infection below 1%, even after an hour of exposure

Wearing a proper mask can keep the risk of infection below 1%, even after an hour of exposure

May 15, 2025
Latest estimate of psychopathy in the general population

Latest estimate of psychopathy in the general population

May 15, 2025

Popular Story

  • Restricting meals to daytime may reduce diabetes risk in night shift workers

    Restricting meals to daytime may reduce diabetes risk in night shift workers

    2983 shares
    Share 1192 Tweet 745
  • Chimps, like humans, show signs of uncertainty when faced with a hard choice

    2181 shares
    Share 872 Tweet 545
  • Wearing a proper mask can keep the risk of infection below 1%, even after an hour of exposure

    1447 shares
    Share 578 Tweet 362
  • Latest estimate of psychopathy in the general population

    1416 shares
    Share 566 Tweet 354
  • More than a third of children in the US don’t know how meat gets to the table

    1087 shares
    Share 434 Tweet 272
  • About

© 2025 PosterBlitz - All rights reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Request a Design
  • Blog
  • About

© 2025 PosterBlitz - All rights reserved