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I don't recall the specifics of who bought what, and how it was done, I'm sure there are others around here that would jump on me if I try to explain it and get it wrong, but some of the numbers on sales early on, are sketchy in reporting attendance. There was a lot of corporate type sales of seats early on for rentschler, and what is reported as ticket sales, sell outs, etc..... didn't correlate very well to actual gate counts of people in the seats, so 32,000 season tickets - didn't translate very well to 32,000 people in the seats.

I'm sure there are others around here that can explain that better than I can, we've been through it all before when discussing ticket sales.

In recent years, though, the actual ticket sales, and gate counts at the game, correlate at lot better.

Bottom line, is that the numbers reflect a 25% decrease from what was reported in the past two years.

Winning games, will help that quite a bit.
 
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.;))


I agree, and I've been there done that.
 
We have a student body of 22000, why aren't at least half of those season ticket holders?. We need to get The students on board!!
 
FYI:

Regarding actual gate count reported attendance, we were reporting steady for a few years around 38k and change average attendance through 2010.

2011 saw that drop to 36k and change reported.

I expect that early season attendance is going to be poor, not good. Be prepared for the news.

It's expected. We went 5-7, last year, with a new coach, the first time that vast majority of UConn fans have ever experience a major coaching change in a major sport, and we lost three of our conference rivals.

Winning games and getting in to the top 25 tends to fix things very quickly though.
 
We have a student body of 22000, why aren't at least half of those season ticket holders?. We need to get The students on board!!
i agree. but if the stadium was on campus we would have 15k in students season tix. then people here would argue that alot less ppl around the hartford and southern areas would go to games. ok fine. i would rather have 15k students and 10k alum/fans then 14k alum/fans and 6k students. but each year those kids graduate they see going back to campus on saturdays as part of culture, it develops quickly. people dont see the rent as a real destination. its a parking lot with a above average mac stadium. sorry thats harash. its not exactly big boy ish which is where we want to be. students have to take 30 min bus rides and there aren't enough or w/e the issue is. the states next project should be selling the rent to a mls team by 2018 and making the highway extension. we continue to create a lax culture of hey, we can come to a place near you so u can watch. instead of come to uconn, see our beautiful campus etc etc and enjoy a day or night here. that leads to kids growiing up wanting to go there and that leads to d 1 athletes from the state wanting to go there and that leads to more grads that stay in the state and become ticket holders. the result is that the towns around storrs all become little college towns instead of nothings like right now. they can develop into little college towns like post road fairfield for example. that is what uconn needs. you can create a college town thru sports. sports bring huge crowds to campus again and again. eventually the towns get built up around that, but were not using that instead we run everything to hartford. were doing things wrong form a while ago and fighting it. thats my opinion on it. get the fuck out of hartford and bring the fan base with you. rant over.

anyway, i hope we have a nice spike the last month and at least get it back up in the mid 20's.
 
We have a student body of 22000, why aren't at least half of those season ticket holders?. We need to get The students on board!!

This is the only downside to having an off-campus facility. It's easy to fill a stadium to capacity when you've got students to put in the seats that can stumble out of their dorm rooms from doing bong hits, or funneling beers, and go to the stadium. Not that students at UConn ever do things like that.

The fact that the stadium is off campus, and that to fill to capacity, you don't have the entire student body to fall back on, is one of the reasons that made me even more upset with the athletic ticket/marketing under our former AD. The focus on ticket sales, and constantly generating new buyers, and retaining repeat buyers and turning new buyers and repeat buyers into multiple package buyers has to be even greater at UConn, than anywhere else.

One of the simplest ways, to build that momentum is to keep track of people's email addresses, every time a ticket is purchased.

I wonder if there is a database in the athletic department of all the emails and addresses of anyone that has ever bought a ticket, dating back to 2003. My guess, is that there is one, but it probably doesn't go back farther than 2008 or so, if that far back.

Totally guessing on that.
 
.-.
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.;))

I agree, and I've been there done that.

sounds like you two need to get a life. Did I mention we are coming from Norwalk, 1:15 with no traffic, up to 1:45 with traffic. My guess is both of you live within a half-hour of East Hartford
 
UConn m & w basketball got people excited once they won, football will too.

The difference is that in an 85-athlete sport, you can't elevate your chances with just a few players, so it's a much longer bootstrapping process. But I'm with Huskyfandan. It will happen. College football is cheap entertainment, especially at UConn.
 
UConn m & w basketball got people excited once they won, football will too.

The difference is that in an 85-athlete sport, you can't elevate your chances with just a few players, so it's a much longer bootstrapping process. But I'm with Huskyfandan. It will happen. College football is cheap entertainment, especially at UConn.


Yes indeed. Don Nehlen was talking about UConn football back in 2002-2003, and he told UConn people, that we all need to be patient. It takes 1 impact player to change a basketball program. In football, you need 15-20 every year, and you've got 2-3 years minimum, before they are going to have any sort of game day impact, and you've got to hope that you can keep those 15-20 eligible academically and not socially shooting themselves in the feet before they can get there.

I think what Pasqualoni has done with our roster in approximately 18 months, is remarkable, and it will get better. If I'm not mistaken, going into fall 2012, we will have close to 75% of the roster turned over from what we had in spring 2011. The players from #1 to #4, all over the field on the depth chart, will look like division 1-A players that can step out on the field on game day and not be overmatched with any opponent. I think that when practices are running this year, the level of competition on the field, will be nothing like what any of the upperclassmen have seen before, and our team is going to be a lot better for it.

I just hope that they don't beat the snot out of each other too badly, before we can line up against the other color jerseys come end of August.

THat's something we've simply never had at this level of football - a full division 1-A roster. We've put teams on the field, with starters that can match up and beat anybody in the country on any given day, but when you got past the #1s.......?

It's a testament to what Edsall was able to accomplish at UConn and his coaching ability. Got to take the good with the bad always, and as much as I disliked his approach to the game, he found a way to win, with what he had, and he took that program he built, to it's limits.

to go beyond what we accomplished, you have to have a machine that can remove and plug in parts without hiccuping. Players always go down and out. That's why the sanctions that PSU got, is going to put a ceiling on how far they can go with winning. Competing at 1-A with 65 scholarships? Ruh roh.
 
Typical home football weekend at a major college program:

Thurs: (Wednesday for really big games): RVs begin arriving.

Friday: most fans outside a 100 mile radius begin arriving.

-Check-in to hotel or wherever your staying.
- Hit the local supermarket for last.minute tailgate supplies, beer, and ice.
- Walk through campus.
- Hit the local town paying special attention to local watering holes, perhaps pick up a new t-shirt, hat, jersey or whatever for the game.
- Have dinner usually at a local haunt you couldn't afford when you were a student or go the other way and hit that old place you used to go.
- Party and hang with people you haven't seen since the last game.
- Go to bed.

Saturday: day trip fans within a two-hour drive show up.

- Set up your tailgate. You are there as soon as the lot opens to get your usual spot. Usually around 7-8am. It doesn't matter what time the game starts.

- Make breakfast. Throw the football, drink a few, watch Gameday on the satellite if you are so prepared.

- for 3:30 and later, make lunch, perhaps take another stroll through campus or visit other tailgates.

- enter the stadium to watch the pregame traditions, hit the restroom.

- Kickoff
- Final Whistle

- Make dinner at tailgate or if you're good enough to know the secret way out, pack up and hit your favorite restaurant before the masses can get out.

- revel in victory or just revel with your fellow fans.

- go to bed.

Sunday: exit plan.
- Get up early enough to hit the breakfast joint 15 minutes before the masses.
- if you arrived late Fri or Sat, do the campus, town, t-shirt thing.
- check out
- Hit road back home.

As far as we've come, we still have a ways to go.


Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
 
Typical home football weekend at a major college program:

Thurs: (Wednesday for really big games): RVs begin arriving.

Friday: most fans outside a 100 mile radius begin arriving.

-Check-in to hotel or wherever your staying.
- Hit the local supermarket for last.minute tailgate supplies, beer, and ice.
- Walk through campus.
- Hit the local town paying special attention to local watering holes, perhaps pick up a new t-shirt, hat, jersey or whatever for the game.
- Have dinner usually at a local haunt you couldn't afford when you were a student or go the other way and hit that old place you used to go.
- Party and hang with people you haven't seen since the last game.
- Go to bed.

Saturday: day trip fans within a two-hour drive show up.

- Set up your tailgate. You are there as soon as the lot opens to get your usual spot. Usually around 7-8am. It doesn't matter what time the game starts.

- Make breakfast. Throw the football, drink a few, watch Gameday on the satellite if you are so prepared.

- for 3:30 and later, make lunch, perhaps take another stroll through campus or visit other tailgates.

- enter the stadium to watch the pregame traditions, hit the restroom.

- Kickoff
- Final Whistle

- Make dinner at tailgate or if you're good enough to know the secret way out, pack up and hit your favorite restaurant before the masses can get out.

- revel in victory or just revel with your fellow fans.

- go to bed.

Sunday: exit plan.
- Get up early enough to hit the breakfast joint 15 minutes before the masses.
- if you arrived late Fri or Sat, do the campus, town, t-shirt thing.
- check out
- Hit road back home.

As far as we've come, we still have a ways to go.


Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2


This is exactly why the big east dropped the ball for so long on football, and basketball ruling the roost. The big east let ESPN convince the conference that friday night was for college football.

College football primetime is saturday afternoon.

THis will be a big part of the next television broadcast contract for the football conference.
 
This is exactly why the big east dropped the ball for so long on football, and basketball ruling the roost. The big east let ESPN convince the conference that friday night was for college football.

College football primetime is saturday afternoon.

THis will be a big part of the next television broadcast contract for the football conference.

ONE midweek prime time game per week is fine. The rest should be scheduled on Saturday at a time the makes sense for.each situation. For us, that's 3:30. Students can roll out to an on campus tailgate for a noon game but, not for a 30 drive. They also can get home in time for Sat night social activities.

Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
 
.-.
sounds like you two need to get a life. Did I mention we are coming from Norwalk, 1:15 with no traffic, up to 1:45 with traffic. My guess is both of you live within a half-hour of East Hartford
Um, actually, 35 minutes. But when the kids were young & I started buying season tickets, games were played in Storrs, a 50-55 minute drive from Southington.
 
.....
Perfect weekend......

Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2

Seriously, how could you want to spend your weekends in the fall doing anything else?
 
Typical home football weekend at a major college program:

Thurs: (Wednesday for really big games): RVs begin arriving.

Friday: most fans outside a 100 mile radius begin arriving.

-Check-in to hotel or wherever your staying.
- Hit the local supermarket for last.minute tailgate supplies, beer, and ice.
- Walk through campus.
- Hit the local town paying special attention to local watering holes, perhaps pick up a new t-shirt, hat, jersey or whatever for the game.
- Have dinner usually at a local haunt you couldn't afford when you were a student or go the other way and hit that old place you used to go.
- Party and hang with people you haven't seen since the last game.
- Go to bed.

Saturday: day trip fans within a two-hour drive show up.

- Set up your tailgate. You are there as soon as the lot opens to get your usual spot. Usually around 7-8am. It doesn't matter what time the game starts.

- Make breakfast. Throw the football, drink a few, watch Gameday on the satellite if you are so prepared.

- for 3:30 and later, make lunch, perhaps take another stroll through campus or visit other tailgates.

- enter the stadium to watch the pregame traditions, hit the restroom.

- Kickoff
- Final Whistle

- Make dinner at tailgate or if you're good enough to know the secret way out, pack up and hit your favorite restaurant before the masses can get out.

- revel in victory or just revel with your fellow fans.

- go to bed.

Sunday: exit plan.
- Get up early enough to hit the breakfast joint 15 minutes before the masses.
- if you arrived late Fri or Sat, do the campus, town, t-shirt thing.
- check out
- Hit road back home.

As far as we've come, we still have a ways to go.


Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
one of the few things I miss about being in Connecticut is being able to do this
 
Typical home football weekend at a major college program:

Thurs: (Wednesday for really big games): RVs begin arriving.

Friday: most fans outside a 100 mile radius begin arriving.

-Check-in to hotel or wherever your staying.
- Hit the local supermarket for last.minute tailgate supplies, beer, and ice.
- Walk through campus.
- Hit the local town paying special attention to local watering holes, perhaps pick up a new t-shirt, hat, jersey or whatever for the game.
- Have dinner usually at a local haunt you couldn't afford when you were a student or go the other way and hit that old place you used to go.
- Party and hang with people you haven't seen since the last game.
- Go to bed.

Saturday: day trip fans within a two-hour drive show up.

- Set up your tailgate. You are there as soon as the lot opens to get your usual spot. Usually around 7-8am. It doesn't matter what time the game starts.

- Make breakfast. Throw the football, drink a few, watch Gameday on the satellite if you are so prepared.

- for 3:30 and later, make lunch, perhaps take another stroll through campus or visit other tailgates.

- enter the stadium to watch the pregame traditions, hit the restroom.

- Kickoff
- Final Whistle

- Make dinner at tailgate or if you're good enough to know the secret way out, pack up and hit your favorite restaurant before the masses can get out.

- revel in victory or just revel with your fellow fans.

- go to bed.

Sunday: exit plan.
- Get up early enough to hit the breakfast joint 15 minutes before the masses.
- if you arrived late Fri or Sat, do the campus, town, t-shirt thing.
- check out
- Hit road back home.

As far as we've come, we still have a ways to go.


Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
The difference is, where we live there are other things to do. At many of those major programs you're talking about, there is literally nothing else to do within a 250 mile radius. You think you're going to get people to do this and give up seeing or going to Red Sox/Yankees September and/or playoff games? If only we had more Mets fans as UConn fans, this wouldn't be an issue. Also don't forget that UConn games overlap with the NFL season, and many people in CT either are Giants/Jets/Pats season ticket holders, or go to games. Additionally, many are season ticket holders of other teams like the Eagles and Redskins, and make a weekend out of going to those games.

This is a pro sports part of the country, and that won't change, that's not the fault of the Big East. Most of these "major programs" are from areas that don't have any professional sports teams nearby, much less three MLB teams, three NFL teams, four NHL teams, and three NBA teams all within a 125 mile radius. Priorities are divided here because of choice overload and the longstanding traditions of some of those pro teams.

It's not to say that we can't build a following, but if you think arriving on Friday for a UConn football game is going to usurp going to/watching Red Sox and Yankee playoff games in October (lol Mets), or going to a Giants/Jets/Pats game, I've got a bridge to sell you.
 
It's not to say that we can't build a following, but if you think arriving on Friday for a UConn football game is going to usurp going to/watching Red Sox and Yankee playoff games in October (lol Mets), or going to a Giants/Jets/Pats game, I've got a bridge to sell you.

The problem to is that if you arrive on a Friday where are you going to go? Buckland Mall? Hartford? There's no college town to hang out in. It's one of the few drawbacks to having an off-campus stadium. The post that gave the itinerary works when stadiums are surrounded by vibrant college towns but that wont occur here which is fine. Also, if stadium was built on campus RVs wouldn't make the trek up there anyways! In the end we need to stop trying to be everyone else and mold our own identity. So far, I like the tailgate scene we currently have and feel it gets better each year!

Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2
 
The difference is, where we live there are other things to do. At many of those major programs you're talking about, there is literally nothing else to do within a 250 mile radius. You think you're going to get people to do this and give up seeing or going to Red Sox/Yankees September and/or playoff games? If only we had more Mets fans as UConn fans, this wouldn't be an issue. Also don't forget that UConn games overlap with the NFL season, and many people in CT either are Giants/Jets/Pats season ticket holders, or go to games. Additionally, many are season ticket holders of other teams like the Eagles and Redskins, and make a weekend out of going to those games.

This is a pro sports part of the country, and that won't change, that's not the fault of the Big East. Most of these "major programs" are from areas that don't have any professional sports teams nearby, much less three MLB teams, three NFL teams, four NHL teams, and three NBA teams all within a 125 mile radius. Priorities are divided here because of choice overload and the longstanding traditions of some of those pro teams.

It's not to say that we can't build a following, but if you think arriving on Friday for a UConn football game is going to usurp going to/watching Red Sox and Yankee playoff games in October (lol Mets), or going to a Giants/Jets/Pats game, I've got a bridge to sell you.

Our broadest, and most effective target of a ticket buying fan base is all within same day travel of the stadium. Area hotels are only going to see traffic from visiting team travelers, which in the past, also involved pretty much same day travel, one night max stay - with the new big east, that will be different, visiting programs will have a contingents staying longer, as air travel will be necessary.

The problem we've had as a big east member, is scheduling. We've been a pawn of ESPN for a long time with football, as filler, while the primetime saturday time slots in the afternoon, have been reserved for other broadcasting. I find it more than ironic, that the ACC, is going to have all the same problems that the Big East football programs had while handcuffed to ESPN. Weeknight games for the best matchups. Odd team scheduling, with alternating years of one less home game per year. A noted writer in the Pittsburgh media had interesting commentary about it all, after his first trip to ACC media day. The commissioner answering questions about the perception of how good ACC football is.....etc. etc.

Anyway - I digress, with the structure of the new big east, and the ability to schedule and broadcast across the entire country, I fully expect to see a lot more UConn games kicking off at home at 3:30pm EST, or on Saturday nights. I think all the football programs in the new big east are looking at that as high priority for the next TV deal. I believe I'd be able to count the number of televised, 3:30 kickoffs we've had in just over a decade of division 1-A football, on one hand.
 
.-.
The problem to is that if you arrive on a Friday where are you going to go? Buckland Mall? Hartford? There's no college town to hang out in. It's one of the few drawbacks to having an off-campus stadium. The post that gave the itinerary works when stadiums are surrounded by vibrant college towns but that wont occur here which is fine. Also, if stadium was built on campus RVs wouldn't make the trek up there anyways! In the end we need to stop trying to be everyone else and mold our own identity. So far, I like the tailgate scene we currently have and feel it gets better each year!

Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2


The gameday atmosphere at Rentschler is fantastic. There aren't that many college football venues that put the entire stadium crowd, tailgating in such close proximity to the field as we can.
 
The difference is, where we live there are other things to do. At many of those major programs you're talking about, there is literally nothing else to do within a 250 mile radius. You think you're going to get people to do this and give up seeing or going to Red Sox/Yankees September and/or playoff games? If only we had more Mets fans as UConn fans, this wouldn't be an issue. Also don't forget that UConn games overlap with the NFL season, and many people in CT either are Giants/Jets/Pats season ticket holders, or go to games. Additionally, many are season ticket holders of other teams like the Eagles and Redskins, and make a weekend out of going to those games.

This is a pro sports part of the country, and that won't change, that's not the fault of the Big East. Most of these "major programs" are from areas that don't have any professional sports teams nearby, much less three MLB teams, three NFL teams, four NHL teams, and three NBA teams all within a 125 mile radius. Priorities are divided here because of choice overload and the longstanding traditions of some of those pro teams.

It's not to say that we can't build a following, but if you think arriving on Friday for a UConn football game is going to usurp going to/watching Red Sox and Yankee playoff games in October (lol Mets), or going to a Giants/Jets/Pats game, I've got a bridge to sell you.

There are no pro sports teams in Michigan or Ohio or Florida or Texas?

The point I was making is that they are big time, because the people do care and that they want to spend their weekend at the game.

As a densly populous state in terms of.alums and overall, you'd think it'd be easier as a one day event, and not even a full day at that.

Others had it right, winning and time make the difference. The seasons tickets are down because the wins (real.ones, not MAC ones) don't look like they are coming soon and time is running out on the BE.

Once you've played with ND, OU, WV and Miami, it's hard to get excited about UMass and Temple.

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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.

It's not the price. It's not game times. It's not cup cakes on the schedule. It's the Product! It's the Product! It's the Product! Here, in the northeast, where
 
There are no pro sports teams in Michigan or Ohio or Florida or Texas?

The point I was making is that they are big time, because the people do care and that they want to spend their weekend at the game.

As a densly populous state in terms of.alums and overall, you'd think it'd be easier as a one day event, and not even a full day at that.

Others had it right, winning and time make the difference. The seasons tickets are down because the wins (real.ones, not MAC ones) don't look like they are coming soon and time is running out on the BE.

Once you've played with ND, OU, WV and Miami, it's hard to get excited about UMass and Temple.

Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2


It is difficult, if you've got kids involved in youth sports, in extracurricular activities, to get to a noon game on a saturday. But it's not impossible. You're either going to miss the entire pre-game atmosphere, or you've got to make a decision to either go to the kids activity in the early afternoon, or miss it, entirely, or miss the game in favor of your kids activity. With a 3:30 start, you might still miss the tailgate, but you're going to be able to get to the game with your kids.

I jjust went through some of the old schedules. If my count is right, since 2002, we've played more wednesday night games than we've had home kickoffs scheduled for a 3:30pm saturday television slot.

THursday and friday nights? Wednesdays? Simply not college football days, and not primetime by any means. Thursday nights now, are going to be NFL. The ACC is going to be filling up fridays for ESPN. Saturday is college football day, and 3:30pm is primetime.
 
It's not the price. It's not game times. It's not cup cakes on the schedule. It's the Product! It's the Product! It's the Product! Here, in the northeast, where


agreed, winning is obviously the most important thing. It's no coincidence though, that when we played Michigan, and we played Notre Dame on the road, that we played on Saturdays, and in the afternoon.
 
It's not the price. It's not game times. It's not cup cakes on the schedule. It's the Product! It's the Product! It's the Product! Here, in the northeast, where

Something weird caused the above to xmit before I was finished,so, I'll try again.

It's not the price. It's not game times. It's not cup cakes on the schedule. It's the Product! It's the Product! It's the Product! Here, in the northeast, where there is incredible competition for the entertainment dollar, the entertainment product has to stand out.

And it is "entertainment," unless, of course, you are one of the fanatics that contribute to the "boneyard." For those, it's life and death. To compete with other forms of entertainment, both sports and otherwise, UCONN will have to provide and promote a competitive product. Games have to become events. It starts with winning, but includes more.

Now, before you answer with a "we don't need band wagon jumper fans;" the answer is: you most assuredly do. Some of those bandwagon fans will become fanatical fans if the product is good and the game experience is better.

But, make no mistake. It's the product, and the product can't be evaluated through a boneyarder's prism.
 
.-.
Something weird caused the above to xmit before I was finished,so, I'll try again.

It's not the price. It's not game times. It's not cup cakes on the schedule. It's the Product! It's the Product! It's the Product! Here, in the northeast, where there is incredible competition for the entertainment dollar, the entertainment product has to stand out.

And it is "entertainment," unless, of course, you are one of the fanatics that contribute to the "boneyard." For those, it's life and death. To compete with other forms of entertainment, both sports and otherwise, UCONN will have to provide and promote a competitive product. Games have to become events. It starts with winning, but includes more.

Now, before you answer with a "we don't need band wagon jumper fans;" the answer is: you most assuredly do. Some of those bandwagon fans will become fanatical fans if the product is good and the game experience is better.

But, make no mistake. It's the product, and the product can't be evaluated through a boneyarder's prism.

UConn basketball didn't take off until the NCAA tournament runs in 1989-1990-1991. We won the NIT in 1988, and had Cliff Robinson on the team going up against all the other big time front line players in the big east, and nobody watched, or cared, except the die-hards.

You've got win, first and foremost, and on top of that, you have to be visible. UConn football has two big east titles, but the only times we've been really visible to the public, to the uconn population is in the past 2 years, and we haven't been that visible. We've had three shots, all away games. Notre Dame, MIchigan, and Oklahoma. The majority of the casual people out there, that would become new ticket buyers, only exposure to uconn football is those three games.

We need to win games, and do it visibly. The band wagon for a top 25 uconn football program, I predict, would be incredible. To my knowledge, we've never won a game at home as a top 25 ranked team.
 
Two of my most memorable games (recently) when it comes to the fan excitement around the games, were the North Carolina game in 2009 and the WVU game at home in I think 2008. Both times, we had good teams on the field, and the opponent was coming in ranked in the top 25. We lost both games.

The best way to make sure we've got a top 25 team on the field at Rentschler, to draw ticket buyers, and interest, is to actually be the top 25 team on the field.
 
Just received an email offering $20 per game tickets with free shipping and 2 additional free tickets to the UMass game if you purchase before 7/31.
 
got the email also.
FB12.jpg


what do u guys make of this?
 
.-.
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