BUBraves2006
New member
As it relates to attendance, let me toss the ???out of town??? perspective out there.
I honestly don??™t buy the injuries concept, from my perspective, on this specifically (not as it relates to how the team would have performed & other arguments). Because for me, I need to budget money for sporting events and I know that I always try and buy tickets when they go on sale to the public due to driving/time concerns, as well as in the past, ticket availability concerns.
So with that said, my tickets were bought (11/2/10) long before the season (SM) and Taylor??™s injury (11/12/10). So, I guess my thinking is, aren??™t a lot of people like me? Don??™t they buy their tickets in advance, long before they would have known about the injuries?
Remember, it??™s not like the good old days where they??™d post a ???tickets sold??? and an ???actual??? attendance figure. So, whether or not I showed up, I was still counted in the figure. So on the flip, why were so few tickets sold early on?
It seems like there are only three answers:
I honestly think it??™s a combination of all three, but the injury thing should not be considered a factor as it relates to tickets sold. If someone can show me some actual numbers that explain people actually don??™t budget and they just randomly decide to buy most of their tickets close to the event (and as it relates to the bad, injury-plagued season) and therefore wouldn??™t go now, then great.
I honestly don??™t buy the injuries concept, from my perspective, on this specifically (not as it relates to how the team would have performed & other arguments). Because for me, I need to budget money for sporting events and I know that I always try and buy tickets when they go on sale to the public due to driving/time concerns, as well as in the past, ticket availability concerns.
So with that said, my tickets were bought (11/2/10) long before the season (SM) and Taylor??™s injury (11/12/10). So, I guess my thinking is, aren??™t a lot of people like me? Don??™t they buy their tickets in advance, long before they would have known about the injuries?
Remember, it??™s not like the good old days where they??™d post a ???tickets sold??? and an ???actual??? attendance figure. So, whether or not I showed up, I was still counted in the figure. So on the flip, why were so few tickets sold early on?
It seems like there are only three answers:
- Apathy (did not think this team would do well)
- Scheduling (lousy non-conference teams to see at home)
- Economy (people just can??™t afford to go)
I honestly think it??™s a combination of all three, but the injury thing should not be considered a factor as it relates to tickets sold. If someone can show me some actual numbers that explain people actually don??™t budget and they just randomly decide to buy most of their tickets close to the event (and as it relates to the bad, injury-plagued season) and therefore wouldn??™t go now, then great.