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Season Ticket count

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Yeah and in this economy I suspect a lot of folks are like me, uncertain about whether they'll be employed at the end of the year. I'm not (yet) super worried about not finding work if I had to, but I would be looking at a larger geographic area. So I stay a single game buyer for now.
 
I have a few friends who have not renewed for a few years because of unknown game times. Not knowing the game times have stopped them from buying season tickets but they still buy individual games for the games they are able to attend and they ended up getting better seats that way.

I know the game times are based on tv and it is out of UConn's control, part of big time college football, etc, but it does inhibit some people.

Yeah every team in the country deals with that.
 
Im not sure I get the math on single game buyers. It seems to be $40 a game after fees on a single game basis and the top of the rent is $120 for the season. Unless you only go to two games how does the math work?
 
It's not just us having problems. The NFL had its lowest per-game average since 1998 and overall sales have declined steadily since 2007. The two factors going against everyone are the economy and the rise of the inexpensive, high quality HD TV/entertainment system. We need to continue to win and do whatever we can to get fannies in the seats. If more-than-casual-but-not-diehard fans knew that every game would eventually sell out, they'd be much less likely to try to cherrypick a few games. We've got to get back to 30k season tickets - which virtually ensures sellouts every game. We'll get there.
 
Im not sure I get the math on single game buyers. It seems to be $40 a game after fees on a single game basis and the top of the rent is $120 for the season. Unless you only go to two games how does the math work?

How many people pay full price for their tickets? If they do, they wouldn't be the people buying Top of the Rent season tix. You can easily find tix in the lots for $15-$20 a game. Sometimes lower depending on how intoxicated the seller may be (one of the perks of parking in red lot :cool:)
 
How many people pay full price for their tickets? If they do, they wouldn't be the people buying Top of the Rent season tix. You can easily find tix in the lots for $15-$20 a game. Sometimes lower depending on how intoxicated the seller may be (one of the perks of parking in red lot :cool:)

Usually much lower. I have a friend who has gone ro 80% of home games over a decade and he hasnt spent $100 total.

If there are people that feel the pinch of $120 or $150 versus single game scalping for $60 or $75 over the course of a year then I understand. I find it hard to believe there are many who don't buy $150 tickets based on the economy.

If we want conferences to take notice, nothing would be louder than an stadium that is sold out on a season ticket basis. Seems a bit shortsighted to me, but I know the mentality. I throw tickets away most weeks, so I know the demand isn't there.
 
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Sunday Ticket and Red Zone and traffic and prices clearly impact the NFL. That isn't impacting UConn in the same fashion. We don't have traffic issues, the at home experience doesn't compare, and the prices are a fraction.

We have a fickle spoiled fanbase that only supports winners. We don't have enough hard core college football fans. It might change, but we've been graduating a decade worth of students in FBS and ticket sales are dropping, not rising.
 
If you're throwing out tickets, give them to me.

Sure. I usually park in the numbered spaces and you are welcome to stop by and grab what's left over. They aren't usually good seats but they get you in the stadium. Sometimes they are suite tickets where you'd have to go find an empty seat in the bleachers.
 
Sure. I usually park in the numbered spaces and you are welcome to stop by and grab what's left over. They aren't usually good seats but they get you in the stadium. Sometimes they are suite tickets where you'd have to go find an empty seat in the bleachers.
I'll hit you up later.
 
I have a few friends who have not renewed for a few years because of unknown game times. Not knowing the game times have stopped them from buying season tickets but they still buy individual games for the games they are able to attend and they ended up getting better seats that way.

I know the game times are based on tv and it is out of UConn's control, part of big time college football, etc, but it does inhibit some people.

Such a CT excuse . . . it's the case everywhere.
 
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Such a CT excuse . . . it's the case everywhere.

Well, yes, it is something everyone has to deal with (as I pointed out) but being that they are UConn alums living in NJ, MA, and NH and have a several hour drive and don't want to have to eat the tickets that it turns out they cannot use, I can understand. They make most games and end up with better seats than their season tickets were when they got them in the 04-08 seasons.
 
Well, yes, it is something everyone has to deal with (as I pointed out) but being that they are UConn alums living in NJ, MA, and NH and have a several hour drive and don't want to have to eat the tickets that it turns out they cannot use, I can understand. They make most games and end up with better seats than their season tickets were when they got them in the 04-08 seasons.

There is no way that UConn fans want to compare the average drive to the stadium against the major programs.

It's pretty simple: at big time football schools the games are the priority. Right or wrong, that is not the culture here.

At major schools nobody cares what time the game is at because they devote the weekend to going to the game. We don't have enough fans who do that so on July 24th UConn has 19k season tickets sold including the students and the band. After a decade, we enter August with probably 13k non student season tickets sold and that folks is why the we are on the outside looking in.
 
You're never going to get white collar businessmen in the northeast devoting entire weekends to a 3 hour college sporting event. It's not the culture up here and likely never will be. What you can do is win a bunch of games to the point that you're selling more season tickets than now (easily doable with a few winning seasons) to the point that every game sells out with game day sales.
 
were creating a culture. it takes time. we will be a powerhouse fanbase in due time. i wont have it any other way and i think most of u here also put up the fight in that. every ticket sold is progress every year. eventually it will turn into 35k sold by august. i can see it.
 
You're never going to get white collar businessmen in the northeast devoting entire weekends to a 3 hour college sporting event. It's not the culture up here and likely never will be. What you can do is win a bunch of games to the point that you're selling more season tickets than now (easily doable with a few winning seasons) to the point that every game sells out with game day sales.

Which might be true, but will forever lock the same people out of the events they would like to attend.

I have no idea what people can possibly do on Saturdays in Connecticut that is better than going to the games. The stadium's access is so easy that you really can attend a game with only a 4-5 hour commitment and still do other things.
 
were creating a culture. it takes time. we will be a powerhouse fanbase in due time. i wont have it any other way and i think most of u here also put up the fight in that. every ticket sold is progress every year. eventually it will turn into 35k sold by august. i can see it.

I hope you're right, but recognize that it's at the moment less a question of why we're not higher and more a question about why we're going in the wrong way so much.
 
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There is no way that UConn fans want to compare the average drive to the stadium against the major programs.

It's pretty simple: at big time football schools the games are the priority. Right or wrong, that is not the culture here.

At major schools nobody cares what time the game is at because they devote the weekend to going to the game. We don't have enough fans who do that so on July 24th UConn has 19k season tickets sold including the students and the band. After a decade, we enter August with probably 13k non student season tickets sold and that folks is why the we are on the outside looking in.

You keep making your point about "graduating a decade of fans" and poopooing the economic factors. Answer me this - what age group is being impacted worst right now?

We picked a lousy decade to upgrade :)
 
..... at the moment (it's) more a question about why we're going in the wrong way so much.

It isn't much of a stretch to conclude that the "wrong way" is due to the convergence of several factors. In addition to the obvious fact that the poor economy has exerted a downward pressure on the fanbase, we also live in a much less rabid area for the sport. The fact is, this is a celebrity driven culture. While there are football fans who will pay to see the product each year no matter what, there are many others who will only come out to see someting that excites them. That means winning--- and that means stars. The publicity machine needs to crank it up around the fan experience and the stars we have. The marketing of the team needs to generate more buzz to help orchestate a boost in interest before The Rent can lay claim to being THE place to be on Saturdays. The task of making UConn football the priority when folks plan their fall weekend activities is the greatest athletic challenge for the school.
 
You're never going to get white collar businessmen in the northeast devoting entire weekends to a 3 hour college sporting event. It's not the culture up here and likely never will be. What you can do is win a bunch of games to the point that you're selling more season tickets than now (easily doable with a few winning seasons) to the point that every game sells out with game day sales.

I don't know why. The Patriots and Giants sure seem okay and it's exactly the same culture. Except tickets are 3-4 times as expensive.

I think the culture can be built. It just isn't going to happen in the first decade. Kids now are just starting to graduate from UConn knowing about the football program. It takes time.
 
If we want conferences to take notice, nothing would be louder than an stadium that is sold out on a season ticket basis. Seems a bit shortsighted to me, but I know the mentality. I throw tickets away most weeks, so I know the demand isn't there.

I agree 100% that selling out our season tix would make conferences take notice but we're too young a program to expect this to happen yet. However we should hope for an increase of sales each year and that hasn't happened.

Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2
 
The topic of Season Ticket Sales has always intrigued me, so I have kept what was sent to me in years past from Desmond Conner.

2011 - - 25,000 (From an earlier post)
2010 -- Never got this number

2009 -- 26,500 (As of 09.02.09).
2008 -- 28,000
2007 -- 27,000
2006 -- 30,000
2005 -- 32,000
2004 -- 28,000
2003 -- 24,000


As you can see, while only July, 19,000 Season Tickets sold is atrocious. I completely understand that I am posting this information to all the Die Hard Fans on here. It seems that the "newness" of the UConn Football product seems to be wearing off. I find it interesting that in 2006 we had 30,000 Season Tix sold, which was a first year of the 2nd 3 Year Ticket Plan and was coming off the losing season during the Bones Era. Our high water mark of 32,000 in 2005 was coming at the end of a 3 year plan and after the Dan O. Years in which we went 9-3 and 8-4.

I think a combination of an upgraded schedule, winning record and better marketing will go a long way to getting these numbers back in the 30,000s. Going into the this season, I actually feel very optimistic on all three of these fronts that by the close of 2012, the football program will be trending upwards.
 
Losses combined with boring offense always hurts season tickets sales. Double whammy last year.
 
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Losses combined with boring offense always hurts season tickets sales. Double whammy last year.

Add a weak schedule slate this year as well. Replacing WVU with Temple and opening on a Thurs night will make people go more towards the game by game ticket sale approach. Next year's schedule should be better and hopefully we should have a good season this year and season tix will rebound.

Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2
 
for my krewe (down to 7 from 9 for this cycle) the biggest issue has been the TBA starting times. A bunch of the guys have kids with activities and cant commit if they dont know when the games will start. And they know a single ticket can usually be bought cheap or more often gifted in the parking lot if they aren't buying the season. I realize this is mostly because the Big East is beholden to TV, but you would think the league could do a little better job, perhaps listing games with two potential start times, rather than TBA. They have to have some clue as to the potential time slots.

As for Michigan 2013, Ive already told my sister (UM '87) she'll have to buy season tickets to get into the game, and then just "donate" all the other games to me LOL
 
The topic of Season Ticket Sales has always intrigued me, so I have kept what was sent to me in years past from Desmond Conner.

2011 - - 25,000 (From an earlier post)
2010 -- Never got this number

2009 -- 26,500 (As of 09.02.09).
2008 -- 28,000
2007 -- 27,000
2006 -- 30,000
2005 -- 32,000
2004 -- 28,000
2003 -- 24,000


As you can see, while only July, 19,000 Season Tickets sold is atrocious. I completely understand that I am posting this information to all the Die Hard Fans on here. It seems that the "newness" of the UConn Football product seems to be wearing off. I find it interesting that in 2006 we had 30,000 Season Tix sold, which was a first year of the 2nd 3 Year Ticket Plan and was coming off the losing season during the Bones Era. Our high water mark of 32,000 in 2005 was coming at the end of a 3 year plan and after the Dan O. Years in which we went 9-3 and 8-4.

I think a combination of an upgraded schedule, winning record and better marketing will go a long way to getting these numbers back in the 30,000s. Going into the this season, I actually feel very optimistic on all three of these fronts that by the close of 2012, the football program will be trending upwards.


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19,000 is what it is, it's about a 25% decrease from a year or two ago at this time. Ticket sales for sporting events of all kinds, are struggling in a wide spectrum, for many reasons.

As for UConn football, Multiple factors at play, but the common denominator is the complete failure of the athletic department to capitalize on the momentum that the "newness" of the football program generated in 2003, combined with the success on the field through 2005. THat, thankfully has changed, (managment/leadership in the AD) but we've got an uphill battle to face, to get that season ticket buyer number back up to where it was 7 years ago.

It's also important to look at overall attendance in the same time frame. What you'd see there, is that attendance is also on a downswing, but the attendance figures also tell more of the story. People are still buying tickets, they're just not buying season ticket packages as much.

That newness is long gone, and the athletic department, marketing, ticketing, did ZERO to generate new buyers for several years, and let all those multiple package repeat and new buyers from 2005, turn into single game buyers.

Combine that, with the evenst of the past 18 months or so, with the fact that now, the ticketing department is actively marketing mini-plans, and discounted packages to go with the regular full season ticket packages......The Jan. 1, 2011, primetime, new year's day blowout, which very well was the first time that hundreeds of thousands of potential ticket buyers saw UConn football play, and the swirl of controversy about how an 8-4 team could be there, the head coach leaving for maryland about a 1/2 hour after the final whistle, a first year head coach, a losing season, and no bowl game for the first time in years,

...and at the same time all that is happening to our program, and it's fans.......the loss of the Syracuse, Pitt, and WVU from the conference, and an entirely new conference for football with entirely new traditions to build up?

I think that if you step back, while 19,000 represents what it does statistically, a 25% drop in season ticket package sales ....... its also pretty good, that with all the factors at play, a 25% decrease in season tix sales as of july 2012, could be a hell of a lot worse.

I would expect that attendance to the early season games, UMass, Buffalo, is going to be poor. If the team gets on a roll, though, and manages to get through to conference play with a decent record and competing for top 25 recognition/ranking?

The attendance come conference play will be just fine, and it will be up to the marketing and ticketing people, to turn those single game buyers in to multiple package buyers.
 
I don't know why. The Patriots and Giants sure seem okay and it's exactly the same culture. Except tickets are 3-4 times as expensive.

I think the culture can be built. It just isn't going to happen in the first decade. Kids now are just starting to graduate from UConn knowing about the football program. It takes time.

Patriots and Giants happen to be regular super bowl contenders in the past few years. I think that's pretty important when it comes to ticket sales demand.
 
Patriots and Giants happen to be regular super bowl contenders in the past few years. I think that's pretty important when it comes to ticket sales demand.

That and 7mil people living in NYC alone probably helps.
 
for my krewe (down to 7 from 9 for this cycle) the biggest issue has been the TBA starting times. A bunch of the guys have kids with activities and cant commit if they dont know when the games will start. And they know a single ticket can usually be bought cheap or more often gifted in the parking lot if they aren't buying the season. I realize this is mostly because the Big East is beholden to TV, but you would think the league could do a little better job, perhaps listing games with two potential start times, rather than TBA. They have to have some clue as to the potential time slots.

As for Michigan 2013, Ive already told my sister (UM '87) she'll have to buy season tickets to get into the game, and then just "donate" all the other games to me LOL
Can't commit because they "have kids with activities"? Sounds like a copout line. I had 3 kids in grade school (grades 5,3,K) when I first started buying season tickets. They played fall sports, were into scouting, & did other after school activities (drama, religion classes, etc.) It didn't impact my decision to purchase season tickets. (Maybe it helped that my wife & I were troop leaders, asst. coaches & could dictate scheduling times.;))
 
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