I'm more frustrated at the way it was, not only promoted, but handled after it started. Most people on campus want football tickets, and I'm glad it was a successful event, and I'm glad I got tickets, no matter how long I stood in line. But from an efficiency standpoint AND the way people perceived how fast tickets were going to sell, it was a mad house in front of the M-Club. You couln't drive on campus without a line being there or a road blocked off, and there were only 4 windows that were selling tickets. <div>
</div><div>I have already sent an email stating my concerns with the program. Overall, it was a very successful program because, not only did a lot of people come (WAY more than anyone expected), they stayed and participated throughout the night. You are absolutely correct with the reasoning that they didn't want students skipping class, but nearly creating panic (not really...) amongst thousands of excited students is not a good recipe. People were very concerned they weren't going to get tickets, even though there were plenty to go around. I know they will take this and learn from it, but they could have taken many steps to manage the perception before they had 3,000 people sitting out on sidewalks for 3 hours before the line was even able to move, when that part really didn't need to happen. That's what I was most frustrated about. </div>