Uconn has sold out 1 game since 2011 (UM where 40% of crowd was maize/blue), maybe pump the brakes on the attendance thing.
Just think about that. BCU couldn't sell out a game against USC.
Just think about that. BCU couldn't sell out a game against USC.
In a winning season with good crowd support from USC too! You put USC on UConn's schedule, in a winning season, and scalpers are making an annual salary's worth of money outside the stadium. We could probably sell our season ticket seat for that one game and pay for the next 4-5 years worth of season tickets. You put USC on UConn's schedule in a losing season (like the year Michigan came here), and we still sell out the Rent.
Hard to say that we didn't sell out USC in "a winning season." That game was week three of 2014. In 2013 we went 2-10, so the preseason season ticket holders definitely didn't view BC as a team, especially with the media predicting another 2 win season. Also, the week before BC got crushed at home by Pitt. So yeah, not exactly fair to say BC was a winning team going into the USC game.
With that said, after winning 7 the last two years and the excitement of the fanbase going into this year, not selling out this year's game against a #9 FSU on a Friday night primetime game was considered by BC fans a more surprising lack of attendance.
Hard to say that we didn't sell out USC in "a winning season." That game was week three of 2014. In 2013 we went 7-6 just barely, were only a year removed from 2-10 and the media was predicting a step back to 4 or 5 wins. Also, the week before BC got crushed at home by Pitt. So yeah, not exactly fair to say BC was a winning team going into the USC game.
With that said, after winning 7 the last two years and the excitement of the fanbase going into this year, not selling out this year's game against a #9 FSU on a Friday night primetime game was considered by BC fans a more surprising lack of attendance.
ya but in case you haven't heard, it was 16,000 Michigan fans and only 24,000 UConn fans.To that point UConn sold out Michigan in week 3 coming off of a 5-7 campaign. So...
ya but in case you haven't heard, it was 16,000 Michigan fans and only 24,000 UConn fans.
me either, but that's what BC fans say, so it must be true.Incredible they can pull the numbers on that. Also, must have been a shortage of Maize and Blue because I don't remember the breakdown at Rentschler looking like that.
We're having issues with attendance. The most widely held theory:
- Lost a lot of season ticket holders with the Spaz disaster for the four years between '09 and '12. The combination of terrible football, increased season ticket prices, increased Donor Based Seating charges for premier seats, increased tailgating costs, increased BCPD presence at tailgates, and even further restrictive tailgating hours. I swear, it was as though DeFilipo and Spaz wrote a script on the best way to destroy a program and then got away with it for 4 years before someone caught on and put a stop to it.
- Starting in '08 BC's students started skewing away from Northeastern states to a more national student body. Fewer recent alumni staying in Boston.
It's probably a combination of the 4.
That's exactly right, because there weren't anywhere near 16K Michigan fans. Also, there were much more than 24K UConn fans, we added seats. Just BCU math.Incredible they can pull the numbers on that. Also, must have been a shortage of Maize and Blue because I don't remember the breakdown at Rentschler looking like that.
Really? A school located in Boston has more alums in Boston than a school not located in Boston?Not unless he thought (like you) that BU still has a football program, he would not be calling for future football games with BU. There would be some interest in Greater Boston to put Northeastern back on the BC football schedule however, as there is a very large base of Huskies alums that live in and around the Greater Boston region( far more than Uconn Huskies Alums for example )
Adherents to this theory would say that games like USC might've come very close to selling out at the box office, but that only 42K made it into the stadium out of a capacity of 44.5K.
Why shouldn't UConn football, have larger home football attendance than BC football does is the question ( BC has had larger football home attendance the last 2 seasons ). UConn is a much bigger school enrollment wise... has far more UConn alums that live near the home stadium of Uconn than the number of BC alums that live near BC's stadium. Unlike BC, UConn has no nearby sports team competition. No Patriots, No Celtics, no Red Sox, no Bruins. In the state of Connecticut, UConn football is much the only game in town in the fall, with little competition for the sports enthusiast dollar Yet it still can't outsell BC at its home football games. Why do UConn Alums.... and there are tens of thousands of them that live in Connecticut still after graduation.... not support UConn football the way it should ? Neither BC nor UConn need not be pointing fingers at one another regarding football attendance (or Bowl Game attendance ) when NEITHER school has football attendance it can brag about, if we are honest with ourselves here.
BC has been enormously short-sited. UCONN was a partial solution to making college football a bigger draw in New England and the Northeast in general. So instead of embracing that, the QUOTE]
There is FAR more interest in Massachusetts for a Umass- BC game than a UConn game with BC. Most of the BC student body are from outside N.E., most of the Alums ( younger ones ) are from outside N.E.. As such, the notion that a BC- UConn football game will be a big boost to " N.E College. Football " is no an accurate assessment. It would be a boon to the state of Connecticut... that's all. BC - Umass had 32,000 fans for its game, 95% of them from the state of Massachusetts. A BC- UConn football game might draw 34,000- 36,000, but with far less Massachusetts at the game as for them, UConn football does little for them in terms of interest. UConn fans would be very well represented of course. But the fact that 3 or 4,000 thousand more fans might come to this single game would be a boost to " N.E. College football " is probably not true... and simply seen thru the prism just one of the 6 N.E. states... just that of the state of Connecticut.
How much time do you spend on the UMass board?
I agree that UConn should have stronger fan support without question and the University should be doing more. Some of the older alumni though do not have a 'connection' to UConn football though as we were D1AA from the early 1900's through 1999, unlike BC, which has been D1A since inception back in the early 1900's. That said, UConn has already proven that with a good on the field product and a decent schedule, UConn will sell-out games on a regular basis. What is BC's excuse?
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Why did UConn bring so few fans to the Fiesta Bowl BCS game?