GoSU96
Living Legend
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- Aug 17, 2011
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Agree. The bad attendance is due to a few factors, the relatively unattractive schedules in recent years is not a big one and changing to the ACC is not going to be impactful in terms of driving demand higher.
The biggest problems with attendance, IMHO, are as follows, in descending order:
1) The team loses a lot more games than it wins. Even at home. This area does not support losing teams.
2) The games have been awful to watch. For far too many years. We get beat badly a lot and rarely show any signs of having even a decent offense to watch. If we have to lose a lot, it would be more interesting to lose games 45-40 instead of 27 to 7.
3) The economy is bad here, a lot of people that used to go to games are gone and the ones they are still here have less disposable income to spend on football.
The quality of the schedule is probably 4th on the list. It becomes more of an issue as more games are moved to NYC.
Everyone knows that the pricing for football tickets is really screwed up right now. We are the only program in the country I see with the endzones mostly filled and the areas between the goal line and the 25 yard line mostly empty. I know a lot of people that used to have seasons in preferred areas but switched to food stamps because of the huge price differential and the fact that a) they can still sit in their old seats if they want and 2) the seats in the food stamp sections are not that bad anyway.
The long term goal should be to increase the season ticket base, increase interest in the program so we start getting sellouts and then, when interest has been restored, increase ticket pricing accord to demand. With the added revenues from TV from joining the ACC, I think we should drop prices for the good seats for football, cut the preferred seating donations for football and give people strong incentives to buy season tickets. Take a loss on ticket revenue now to get to a point where pricing can be adjusted to where it belongs later. And do everything possible to make the product on the field something fans would enjoy seeing. In the final analysis, that is the most important thing.
Sometimes you have to take a step backwards to take two steps forward.
I'd move 3) to 1). That's biggest problem.
Local attitude is back to where it was in the late '70's. The brand loyalty/passion that is there for hoops is not there for football.