by Professor » Wed Jan 08, 2014 12:12 pm
Of course experience matters. Especially playoff experience.
When you play regular season games, you play for the long strategy. You hold back a bit in a game, because you know you have another one next week, regardless of what happens in this one. And, if you lose this one and win the next 5, you still make the postseason.
In the playoffs, you play 100% from the start. Because you know that if you lose, you have a year to recuperate.
Also, experience helps because you won't have jitters. When you've thrown a first pass of a game in a SB or multiple playoff games before, you aren't nervous. You just do your job. When its your first playoff game, and the coach calls a pass play, the first thing on your mind is "don't screw this up" or "it's my big moment" - not what it should be, which is just thinking about the route, the defense, etc.
Now, is it a huge deal? I don't think nearly as big as people make it out to be. But, it can definitely affect things.
Also, when it's your first game, leading up to it, you'll be excited. This means you may not have slept well the night before. I remember not sleeping but a couple hours on the day before my first championship race. But, once I'd won the championship, I was not as nervous about it the next year when it came around again.