Warde on Record: 10,000 More Seats (Hartford Business Journal) | Page 7 | The Boneyard

Warde on Record: 10,000 More Seats (Hartford Business Journal)

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At the very least, I think the UCONN AD needs to send the message that our stadium was designed and built to get to a minimum of 50,000. Hire a sketch artist and come up with a few drawings of what an expanded stadium could look like. We need to make sure that it is crystal friggin' clear that our football stadium can easily and quickly be expanded.

I'd prefer the proactive approach too and get the stadium to 60K right now. If UCONN never gets a P5 invite, then a bigger stadium would help recruiting and help OOC scheduling. Curtain the upper deck off like Oakland A's baseball for games against Memphis and Tulane and shut down concessions to reduce game by game overhead. Only open it for the "big" games. Even if all the seats aren't sold, 43,000 is still better than 40,000. But I'd think that expanding the football stadium now would send quite a message to everybody who views UCONN as not being interested in football. UCONN can do both: be an elite basketball program AND be competitive in football.
 
43K I checked.

So you guys mean to tell me that we are going to go from 31K to 50K where the biggest game of the year had 50% of the opposing team's fans. Show me the money. 28K ST this year and I am all in, otherwise I do not trust our fan base.

Don't take me wrong guys. I have never missed a Home Game and I am hoping every second that I am wrong, but it will take 5 years to get to another conference.

Come on. If you put good opponents on the field fans come in droves. There have been plenty of games where the place has been packed to the gills - West Virginia, Michigan, BC, Pitt, etc.. What doesn't get great pull is Buffalo, Stony Brook, etc...
1) you checked, and still miss the point. Had they not expanded, that's 7k, and 4k tickets they would have left on the table the last two years.
2) Nobody said we were going to go from 31 to 50k. Expansion is not done for what happens the year after it's completed. It's for what will happen for the few decades after it's been completed.
3) No way Michigan had 50% of the fans there, I was there too, you're full of it. You're also ignoring the 38 other sellouts. Did all of those teams fill half the stadium too?
4) Yes, it will likely take 3-5 years to get to another conference. Which is why you start beating the drum for expansion now. We already waited too long, waiting again could be the nail in the coffin. If the AD and Pres don't push expansion, they aren't doing everything they can to save the program. That's not hyperbole (unlike your Michigan attendance comment) that's the truth.

Thank God our AD doesn't share this small time thinking.

Ill add this. You can check our official attendance history and you can see pre the PP nightmare, the Rent was more than capable of filling to capacity at 40K. The two keys are putting a viable product on the field and scheduling enough big boys that people come out for the season and stay interested. We had some pretty decent name teams at the Rent in the past. There is no question UConn football can support a 5oK stadium. Its time to act BIG!
 
Expanding a stadium is like planting a tree.

The best time to it was 10 years ago.

Second best time to do it is today.

With expansion you are either early to need or late to need. And late to need can't ever be backfilled.

Look at the model of Lville, Rutgers, UCF and most others. Build it early, accept some empty and discounted (free) tickets and be ready for demand when it catches up.
 
Expanding a stadium is like planting a tree.

The best time to it was 10 years ago.

Second best time to do it is today.

With expansion you are either early to need or late to need. And late to need can't ever be backfilled.

Look at the model of Lville, Rutgers, UCF and most others. Build it early, accept some empty and discounted (free) tickets and be ready for demand when it catches up.

Spot on Chin. You don't expand expecting 50-60,000 sellouts right away. Sure, it would be nice. But you expand to show that you are confident in your program's ability to grow.
 
1) you checked, and still miss the point. Had they not expanded, that's 7k, and 4k tickets they would have left on the table the last two years.
2) Nobody said we were going to go from 31 to 50k. Expansion is not done for what happens the year after it's completed. It's for what will happen for the few decades after it's been completed.
3) No way Michigan had 50% of the fans there, I was there too, you're full of it. You're also ignoring the 38 other sellouts. Did all of those teams fill half the stadium too?
4) Yes, it will likely take 3-5 years to get to another conference. Which is why you start beating the drum for expansion now. We already waited too long, waiting again could be the nail in the coffin. If the AD and Pres don't push expansion, they aren't doing everything they can to save the program. That's not hyperbole (unlike your Michigan attendance comment) that's the truth.

Thank God our AD doesn't share this small time thinking.
Reality check. August 30th.
 
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Obtuse, stupid, short-sighted, or all of the above?
Reality check . August 30th. I hope the landing is not too hard.

This is not a movie. If you build it they will come.
 
Anybody here know how many season ticket holders we had here before building the Rent? Carl must.
 

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Expanding a stadium is like planting a tree.

The best time to it was 10 years ago.

Second best time to do it is today.

With expansion you are either early to need or late to need. And late to need can't ever be backfilled.

Look at the model of Lville, Rutgers, UCF and most others. Build it early, accept some empty and discounted (free) tickets and be ready for demand when it catches up.

There really is no other way of looking at this. Note to UConn and Connecticut fans . . . stop with the idea that its OK being college football's equivalent of "the world's tallest midget".
 
In addition to the expansion, I hope UCONN considers a cover for the fans like the new Atlanta Braves stadium...

http://www.cbssports.com/mlb/eye-on-baseball/24562200/braves-unveil-first-rendering-of-new-ballpark

A cover in Connecticut would be worse weather-wise since most games are played in the day, and this would block out the sun.

The best thing for the conference is for the southern schools to get more late in the season games and for Cincy, Temple and UConn to get early season games. For some reasons, the AAC scheduler has things reversed. It could be UConn asked for things this way, so the southern boys can visit during the cold weather.
 
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Look, I've been lukewarm on expanding the stadium as I think money could be better spent elsewhere but I also think at this point maybe we go all in and just do it.

That being said, " the build it and they will come" mantra is about the dumbest thing on here besides going Indy.

Also, comparing season ticket bases as a D1AA/ transitioning FBS school playing at memorial stadium vs playing legitimate BCS football in a 40,000 seat stadium is pretty close in terms of flawed logic.

I mean really. Apples to oranges doesn't even do that parallel justice.
 
BlueDogs said:
The two keys are putting a viable product on the field and scheduling enough big boys that people come out for the season and stay interested. We had some pretty decent name teams at the Rent in the past. There is no question UConn football can support a 5oK stadium. Its time to act BIG!

Ding.
 
I don't want to speak for others, but I am for expanding the stadium now. Not because I think we are going to suddenly sell 55k tickets, but because interest rates are low and that kind of move shows serious commitment to football.

UCONN's potential role in a P5 conference is ELITE basketball and competitive football. Our football program will never achieve Alabama stature, but then again, neither will our other northeastern rivals. If I were a betting man, I'd bet on the athletic department that has a long history of success in most sports. That AD is very clearly UCONN.

Expanding the Rent now is the equivalent of a company CEO purchasing millions of dollars of his/her company's own shares at a time that they feel the stock price is undervalued. Bet on yourself, no one else. I am completely confident in our schools ability to grow programs. So should UCONN.
 
A cover in Connecticut would be worse weather-wise since most games are played in the day, and this would block out the sun.

The best thing for the conference is for the southern schools to get more late in the season games and for Cincy, Temple and UConn to get early season games. For some reasons, the AAC scheduler has things reversed. It could be UConn asked for things this way, so the southern boys can visit during the cold weather.

I like to seating cover concept because it eliminates weather excuses for fans to leave their seats (or not show up). Keep the field exposed to our New England winters though to preserve our home field advantage in Nov and Dec.
 
Expanding a stadium is like planting a tree.

The best time to it was 10 years ago.

Second best time to do it is today.

With expansion you are either early to need or late to need. And late to need can't ever be backfilled.

Look at the model of Lville, Rutgers, UCF and most others. Build it early, accept some empty and discounted (free) tickets and be ready for demand when it catches up.

I get the impression that some of you would not understand any of the Feasibility studies that have been used for massive Hotel construction nor the boom in Student Housing nor lots of Mixed Use projects.

None of this was obvious ... and it took a little projection to come up with the viability of anyone putting financing into any of these. And some fail. But ... on whole ... you have an industry - unlike your thinking - that has gained the confidence of financial institutions. And that is how major projects in North America happen. They don't "fill" the seats. They PROJECT what is coming.

And again ... we have the simplest FINANCE structure in place. We have the capacity to raise the needed dollars on pure current Cash Flow and collapse/refinance the current bonding. Who is impacted? I don't think it changes a Credit Agency's view of the State or the Public Authority one bit.
 
Not as many as we have now.
Div. 1-AA does not and cannot remotely compare to Div-1A or FBS. I lived across the street for 3 out of the 4 seasons in Storrs and I went to maybe 3 or 4 games a season (including Yale Bowl), even thought student tix were $5. I lived in Ellsworth during my Senior and could see the south end from my dorm window. The most well attended games were obviously Homecoming and the first night game in Storrs in '95 ("Let There be Lights!"), and even then there was far less than the 19,000 capacity Memorial Stadium.
 
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I get the impression that some of you would not understand any of the Feasibility studies that have been used for massive Hotel construction nor the boom in Student Housing nor lots of Mixed Use projects.

None of this was obvious ... and it took a little projection to come up with the viability of anyone putting financing into any of these. And some fail. But ... on whole ... you have an industry - unlike your thinking - that has gained the confidence of financial institutions. And that is how major projects in North America happen. They don't "fill" the seats. They PROJECT what is coming.

And again ... we have the simplest FINANCE structure in place. We have the capacity to raise the needed dollars on pure current Cash Flow and collapse/refinance the current bonding. Who is impacted? I don't think it changes a Credit Agency's view of the State or the Public Authority one bit.

Maybe we should draw up a proposal. Authored by the Boneyard. My only stipulation to be included in such financing/capital investement and construction project proposal, is that upon completion, that "Dog Pound" be renamed the "Boneyard" and have it on the padding around the stadium at field level.
 
Reality check . August 30th. I hope the landing is not too hard.

This is not a movie. If you build it they will come.

1. Assuming you are talking about the BYU game, you're going to miss it if you go to East Hartford on the 30th. the game was moved from August 28th to Friday August 29.

2. A single game does not prove the point one way or the other.

3. How about this cliche'? Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.

4. UConn does not own the stadium. They pay ~ $170,000 per game. If the stadium were to be expanded, Global Spectrum could then book more dates, including bigger name concerts, USNT (both Mens and Womens) Intl friendlies, visiting European soccer clubs, etc. to offset the capital cost to the State. Since it's inception, the facility has been cash flow positive, if not made a profit, in all but less than a handful of years, and that's only because of non-cash items such as depreciation.
 
It would probably work better if you chose to dress like Bruce Wayne. Batman comes with being a self made, multi-billionaire with a mansion on the outskirts of Gotham...

Batman also doesn't get paid...Last I checked, Superhero is not an profitable occupation.
 
As of May 1, 2014 RU sold 23,900 season tickets an increase of 1900 from the previous year. Then on 5/19-5/23 they offer 3 game mini plan to contributors and on 3/27 mini plans open to the public. 26,00 season ticket is their goal. Taken from the RU Scout board.
 
Look, I've been lukewarm on expanding the stadium as I think money could be better spent elsewhere but I also think at this point maybe we go all in and just do it.

That being said, " the build it and they will come" mantra is about the dumbest thing on here besides going Indy.

Also, comparing season ticket bases as a D1AA/ transitioning FBS school playing at memorial stadium vs playing legitimate BCS football in a 40,000 seat stadium is pretty close in terms of flawed logic.

I mean really. Apples to oranges doesn't even do that parallel justice.


Everyone who keeps complaining about the cost, or where their belief that the money should be spent elsewhere doesn't want to accept the fact that the state would be paying, not UConn.

My question about the season ticket base is hyperbole specifically for one poster who's small mindedness is stuck on the single factor of season tickets.

He's got an arbitrary number of 28,000 season tickets. He said less than 25,000 is a failure but 28,000 means we should consider expansion. Is 3,000 season tickets really that important when the difference between expansion and the status quo could be the difference between the AAC and an invite out? What about the likelihood of an anti-trust suit? Wouldn't the largest college stadium and newest facilities in the northeast be clear evidence that UConn is more than prepared to compete at the same level as Saracuse, Rutgers, and BCU? And to lock us out of that competition is a violation of anti-trust laws?

Season tickets is hardly as important as tickets sold. If we're only getting 20,000 season tickets, but selling out 50-75% of our games then there is clearly a demand for tickets. If Diaco does well, Warde gets some decent games scheduled, and we start selling out more (like we used to) the important factor is that sell outs mean the opportunity cost of lost revenue.

We've sold out plenty of home games. That is lost revenue. The idea that we shouldn't push for expansion because of 3-5,000 season tickets is so small minded it's amazing some of you wouldn't prefer to go back to the Yankee conference. If you really believe that the size of the stadium has not come up behind the scenes in discussions with other conferences as an area for improvement, I think you're ignoring the obvious.
 
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Everyone who keeps complaining about the cost, or where their belief that the money should be spent elsewhere doesn't want to accept the fact that the state would be paying, not UConn.

My question about the season ticket base is hyperbole specifically for one poster who's small mindedness is stuck on the single factor of season tickets.

He's got an arbitrary number of 28,000 season tickets. He said less than 25,000 is a failure but 28,000 means we should consider expansion. Is 3,000 season tickets really that important when the difference between expansion and the status quo could be the difference between the AAC and an invite out? What about the likelihood of an anti-trust suit? Wouldn't the largest college stadium and newest facilities in the northeast be clear evidence that UConn is more than prepared to compete at the same level as Saracuse, Rutgers, and BCU? And to lock us out of that competition is a violation of anti-trust laws?

Season tickets is hardly as important as tickets sold. If we're only getting 20,000 season tickets, but selling out 50-75% of our games then there is clearly a demand for tickets. If Diaco does well, Warde gets some decent games scheduled, and we start selling out more (like we used to) the important factor is that sell outs mean the opportunity cost of lost revenue.

We've sold out plenty of home games. That is lost revenue. The idea that we shouldn't push for expansion because of 3-5,000 season tickets is so small minded it's amazing some of you wouldn't prefer to go back to the Yankee conference. If you really believe that the size of the stadium has not come up behind the scenes in discussions with other conferences as an area for improvement, I think you're ignoring the obvious.

I have two Gut Checks this year.

June 23rd the day after we play Portugal in the World Cup and August 30th the day after we play BYU and see how many fans show up.

Without MI on the schedule I am optimistic to have have sold 25 K. My gut tells me bad things. I have been wrong before. On verra.
 
Div. 1-AA does not and cannot remotely compare to Div-1A or FBS. I lived across the street for 3 out of the 4 seasons in Storrs and I went to maybe 3 or 4 games a season (including Yale Bowl), even thought student tix were $5. I lived in Ellsworth during my Senior and could see the south end from my dorm window. The most well attended games were obviously Homecoming and the first night game in Storrs in '95 ("Let There be Lights!"), and even then there was far less than the 19,000 capacity Memorial Stadium.

Don't mean to quibble (sp?) but the actual capacity in '95 was 14,400. The listed capacity for Memorial Stadium was 16,200. It was listed at 16,200 prior to the removal of the seats in both end zones. The west side capacity was 10,400 and the east side was 4,000.
 
Don't mean to quibble (sp?) but the actual capacity in '95 was 14,400. The listed capacity for Memorial Stadium was 16,200. It was listed at 16,200 prior to the removal of the seats in both end zones. The west side capacity was 10,400 and the east side was 4,000.
So extrapolate. I was between meetings and couldn't check Wikipedia. :D
 
A cover in Connecticut would be worse weather-wise since most games are played in the day, and this would block out the sun.

The best thing for the conference is for the southern schools to get more late in the season games and for Cincy, Temple and UConn to get early season games. For some reasons, the AAC scheduler has things reversed. It could be UConn asked for things this way, so the southern boys can visit during the cold weather.
Having Memphis (average early December temp mid 50s) come to us (average early December temp low 40s and let me you it was NOT in the 40s when the teams played) was pretty moronic last year. Either way, I think both basketball games were gonna outdraw that football game.
 
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