Due to yesterday's horrendous student turnout, and the discussion on this board about it, I decided to research all the SEC schools, except Missouri, to find out what other schools are doing in regards to student ticket allotments and what we should be doing. Below is the data:
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*Texas A&M has the largest student section in the country. 12th man stuff I guess.
So what does all this mean?
IMO, we are offering to many student tickets per game when compared to our overall stadium capacity and on campus school enrollment. If you remove Texas A&M from the equation, since they skew the data, according to this data and in keeping in-line with percentages of the whole SEC, MSU should be offering the following to students:
8,212 student tickets before our stadium expansion
8,690 student tickets following the stadium expansion
Some schools also have a lottery, and maybe MSU should explore that if they were to lower to the student ticket allotment. However, right now, it is clear that MSU is offering to many tickets to students when compared to the rest of the SEC.
My Guess is that MSU offers so many student tickets because at one time it was much more difficult to sell the general tickets than the student. Therefore, in order for Scott Field to be filled, we had to have more students in the stands than we should have. However, just like with many other things in the world, you have to adapt and change to current needs. MSU now has a waiting list for season tickets, and due to that should lower the percentage of student tickets to what the percentages say they should be.
*Disclaimer: I put this together very quickly on the best data I could find. I may have made a math mistake at some point and would love if anyone has any ideas as to how to make this data more representative of the conference.
Much of the info was taken from the below link:
http://businessofcollegesports.com/2011/05/02/sec-student-ticket-prices-and-availability/
School | Student Tickets | Capacity | % of stadium | On campus school enrollment | % of student tickets to enrollment |
Mississippi State | 11,000 | 55,082 | 19.97% | 20,424 | 53.80% |
Alabama | 11,000 | 101,821 | 10.80% | 30,602 | 35.90% |
Arkansas | 9,500 | 72,000 | 13.20% | 24,595 | 38.60% |
Auburn | 16,000 | 87,451 | 18.30% | 25,469 | 62.80% |
Florida | 20,750 | 88,458 | 23.50% | 49,589 | 41.80% |
Georgia | 18,026 | 92,746 | 19.40% | 33,367 | 54.00% |
Kentucky | 4,500 | 67,606 | 6.70% | 28,094 | 16.00% |
LSU | 14,000 | 92,400 | 15.20% | 29,549 | 47.00% |
TSUN | 5,500 | 60,580 | 9.10% | 16,786 | 32.70% |
South Carolina | 10,000 | 80,250 | 12.50% | 30,967 | 32.20% |
Tennessee | 14,000 | 102,455 | 13.70% | 27,523 | 50.80% |
Vanderbilt | 6,000 | 39,790 | 15.10% | 12,714 | 47.10% |
Texas A&M* | 30,284 | 90,079 | 33.60% | 53,337 | 56.70% |
Totals | 170,560 | 1,030,718 | 16.55% | 383,016 | 44.53% |
Excluding TAMU | 140,276 | 940,639 | 14.91% | 329,679 | 42.55% |
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</tbody>
*Texas A&M has the largest student section in the country. 12th man stuff I guess.
So what does all this mean?
IMO, we are offering to many student tickets per game when compared to our overall stadium capacity and on campus school enrollment. If you remove Texas A&M from the equation, since they skew the data, according to this data and in keeping in-line with percentages of the whole SEC, MSU should be offering the following to students:
8,212 student tickets before our stadium expansion
8,690 student tickets following the stadium expansion
Some schools also have a lottery, and maybe MSU should explore that if they were to lower to the student ticket allotment. However, right now, it is clear that MSU is offering to many tickets to students when compared to the rest of the SEC.
My Guess is that MSU offers so many student tickets because at one time it was much more difficult to sell the general tickets than the student. Therefore, in order for Scott Field to be filled, we had to have more students in the stands than we should have. However, just like with many other things in the world, you have to adapt and change to current needs. MSU now has a waiting list for season tickets, and due to that should lower the percentage of student tickets to what the percentages say they should be.
*Disclaimer: I put this together very quickly on the best data I could find. I may have made a math mistake at some point and would love if anyone has any ideas as to how to make this data more representative of the conference.
Much of the info was taken from the below link:
http://businessofcollegesports.com/2011/05/02/sec-student-ticket-prices-and-availability/