Ticket prices went way up for people paying seat donations. I tried to explain that but everyone just got mad at me.
That number includes students and the family freebees.
That is downright frightening.
I had the same gripe. I don't think people here got mad at me, but they definitely made a face like I farted in the elevator with them.
Boise, UCF, Memphis, and UH all draw good crowds; 30k plus on average. 3 of those schools play in the same conference as we do. Boise plays in a worse conference. All 4 are able to draw good crowds because they win. Yes it helps that they play an exciting brand of football (all have dynamic offenses).
No reason UConn can't get to 30k attendance on average again if we put a winning product on the field.
Memphis game last year did me in finally after fifteen years. Will scalp for five bucks in the parking lot
People are missing the fact that when we drew those big crowds ten years ago, not only were we winning, and not only were we in a better conference, but there was also a novelty factor, a growth factor that made people want to invest. Our ascent in the FBS world was going way faster than people expected, and by the time we broke through to the Fiesta Bowl we had already knocked on the door a couple of times. It had the feel of an exciting story, to the point that people were beginning to wonder whether the program was following in basketball's footsteps.
That's gone. Even if Edsall recovers the program, and we dabble with 7-5 or 8-4, I just don't see the excitement getting back to where it was. People can say the dreams were always unrealistic, but that doesn't always matter when it comes to selling tickets. There are no more delusions of grandeur about what you can accomplish playing college football in the state of Connecticut - if we happened to join a premier conference, you'd probably see big crowds the first few times we played a marquee opponent, but after that they'd begin to dwindle with every season we spent in mediocrity. It's not like fans of Syracuse, Pitt, or BC are knocking the doors down right now because the demand is so high. The product won't be there in the northeast because the culture isn't there, and the culture is a lot harder to develop on mile 20 than mile 1.
Boise, UCF, Memphis, and UH all draw good crowds; 30k plus on average. 3 of those schools play in the same conference as we do. Boise plays in a worse conference. All 4 are able to draw good crowds because they win. Yes it helps that they play an exciting brand of football (all have dynamic offenses).
No reason UConn can't get to 30k attendance on average again if we put a winning product on the field.
All sports are, on the whole, experiencing attendance issues. There's a lot of contributing factors - cost of tickets, having to pay Ticketmaster/Stubhub/etc. fees, parking fees, high cost of concessions, poor facilities or seats, increasing numbers of excessively drunk fans causing problems with no response from the facility, poor sightlines from seats, donation fees/PSLs, people's increasing lack of desire to be in public spaces with large numbers of people, and increasingly better HDTV and home entertainment experience....to name a few.And elsewhere MLB has attendance issues as well. And with the economy strong - all of this is more alarming...what happens in the next recession?
MLB has an attendance issue
Bingo. I'd bet you 90% of CT residents can't even tell you what UCF, ECU, and SMU stands for.
The primary culprit is the conference. Winning will bring some back, but unless we're going 11-0 every year, no one is going to care about seeing us play AAC teams. Doesn't matter how much Aresco and/or Benedict try and talk up the conference, there's absolutely no cache.
Besides losing regional and historic rivals, sometimes over time in Connecticut, the newness factor wears off. I've seen the Bridgeport Bluefish, New Haven Ravens, multiple minor league hockey teams all open with huge followings, only to lose attendance year after year until they fold. Winning would change a lot of this. I hope
Yup. When Memphis sucked they averaged 20K. They once had a home game vs ECU with an announced attendance of 4K.
They'll average over 40K this year. Winning and being competitive in our losses with get us to 30K+.
Memphis game last year did me in finally after fifteen years. Will scalp for five bucks in the parking lot
That’s long goneIs the old stadium next to Gampel still around? Perhaps they can take the few thousand showing up and put them there.
There was novelty back in the Big East to showing up to games against big rivals like Cuse and Pitt. The tailgating scene was always a blast. Now i feel like you have to tailgate to numb the game experience.
UCF is going to drop at least 50 on our young defense... Watching Memphis put up 70 was certainly demoralizing...
We live in a state where there are 10 + pro and college sports teams within a couple of hours. CT people are not going to stick through hard times for very long before putting their time and attention to something else.
Sucks but it is what it is. Lots of pressure on Edsall to turn this around in the next couple of years.
Yup. When Memphis sucked they averaged 20K. They once had a home game vs ECU with an announced attendance of 4K.
They'll average over 40K this year. Winning and being competitive in our losses with get us to 30K+.
I just don't see how we keep a football program if this continues. I'm not even sure winning is going to get us back to 30k+ in the stadium
I'm willing to pay $10I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s more expensive to scalp this year than the last few. So few tickets sold that the only people buying them use them.