This is why Liberty Bowl wanted us....We can Dance the Dance!

Topgundawg

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Oct 23, 2010
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[h=1]BCS Teams Struggling To Sell Bowl Tickets[/h] Monday, December 23, 2013 11:20 pm




It's not just the teams playing in low- and mid-level bowls this season that are having trouble selling tickets. According to reports, several BCS-bound teams are struggling to get rid of their allotment.
Both teams playing in the Fiesta Bowl, Baylor and Central Florida, have returned thousands of unsold tickets from their 17,500 seat allotment. Baylor sold about 12,000 tickets while Central Florida managed to sell less than half of its allotment.
Perhaps more surprising is that Ohio State, a school whose tradition trumps both Baylor's and UCF's, is having a hard time ridding itself of a 17,500 ticket Orange Bowl allotment. According to the Toledo Blade, the Buckeyes have only sold about 7,000 tickets thus far.
<center>
</center> That's not to say Ohio State fans won't be showing up in droves, but it may mean that fans are circumventing the school in search of better seats on the secondary market. The tickets being sold by Ohio State range between $90 and $240 while fans can easily find seats on Stubhub for half that price.
This isn't the first time in recent years that an Orange Bowl team has struggled to sell out its allotment. Last year Florida State sold less than half its allotment while Northern Illinois couldn't get rid of 7,000 tickets. In 2012 Clemson and West Virginia were forced to eat a combined total of more than 15,000 tickets.
Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith told the Blade that the bowl allotments are “a hard business model that we keep fighting.”
Luckily for Ohio State, the Big Ten absorbs unsold tickets. Last year conferences and schools ate nearly $21 million in unsold tickets.
All told, only a handful of bowl-bound programs will make money in the postseason, and most of those are BCS teams. What's harder to measure, however, is the revenue that schools will get from the publicity and the recruiting benefits that come with a successful season.
College bowls, particularly those in the BCS, have come under increased scrutiny in recent years for its business practices. Many of the bigger bowls enjoy tax breaks, but then charge the schools -- many of which are taxpayer-financed public universities -- for not selling their ticket allotment. A 2011 investigation by HBO's
 

archdog

Redshirt
Aug 22, 2012
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my take on bowl tickets is

[h=1]BCS Teams Struggling To Sell Bowl Tickets[/h] Monday, December 23, 2013 11:20 pm




It's not just the teams playing in low- and mid-level bowls this season that are having trouble selling tickets. According to reports, several BCS-bound teams are struggling to get rid of their allotment.
Both teams playing in the Fiesta Bowl, Baylor and Central Florida, have returned thousands of unsold tickets from their 17,500 seat allotment. Baylor sold about 12,000 tickets while Central Florida managed to sell less than half of its allotment.
Perhaps more surprising is that Ohio State, a school whose tradition trumps both Baylor's and UCF's, is having a hard time ridding itself of a 17,500 ticket Orange Bowl allotment. According to the Toledo Blade, the Buckeyes have only sold about 7,000 tickets thus far.
<center>
</center> That's not to say Ohio State fans won't be showing up in droves, but it may mean that fans are circumventing the school in search of better seats on the secondary market. The tickets being sold by Ohio State range between $90 and $240 while fans can easily find seats on Stubhub for half that price.
This isn't the first time in recent years that an Orange Bowl team has struggled to sell out its allotment. Last year Florida State sold less than half its allotment while Northern Illinois couldn't get rid of 7,000 tickets. In 2012 Clemson and West Virginia were forced to eat a combined total of more than 15,000 tickets.
Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith told the Blade that the bowl allotments are “a hard business model that we keep fighting.”
Luckily for Ohio State, the Big Ten absorbs unsold tickets. Last year conferences and schools ate nearly $21 million in unsold tickets.
All told, only a handful of bowl-bound programs will make money in the postseason, and most of those are BCS teams. What's harder to measure, however, is the revenue that schools will get from the publicity and the recruiting benefits that come with a successful season.
College bowls, particularly those in the BCS, have come under increased scrutiny in recent years for its business practices. Many of the bigger bowls enjoy tax breaks, but then charge the schools -- many of which are taxpayer-financed public universities -- for not selling their ticket allotment. A 2011 investigation by HBO's

The tickets they sell through the bulldog club and other school's ticket offices are usually some of the worst tickets you can buy for a somewhat premium price.

If I could do a few things to change that here is what I would do.
1. Offer multiple zones for seating that people can buy their way into. Between the 40s at 150 per ticket. Endzone seats at 50 dollars a ticket. Each ticket worth 1 club point regardless of location.
2. Or, let people call in and name their section they want to sit in specifically. They do it through ticketmaster for concerts and monster truck rallies. Take the tickets out of the hands of the school's ticket office.

You have to make it extremely better than watching from the couch. Memphis is a cool town and close to our fanbase which is why we are selling a ton of tickets. Ohio State playing in the orangebowl has a lot going against it.
 

TulsaLawDawg

Sophomore
Aug 24, 2012
653
144
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Another issue is that many locals snatch up bowl game tix early

Usually before teams are selected. Sadly, the bowls sell the good seats months in advance to people who will ultimately re-sell the tickets to fans through places like stubhub. What this means is that the bowls have little reason to hold premium seats for schools knowing that internet scalpers are willing to buy those seats early.

Music City has been trying to sell me bowl tickets early for the last two years because I bought directly from them in addition to BDC.
 
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archdog

Redshirt
Aug 22, 2012
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My point is that the bowl teams make the university buy the tickets anyway. Why not let them buy the best tickets. The bulldog club would then be the best deal for fans that donate the money every year for almost zero benefit other than season tickets.
 

PBRME

All-Conference
Feb 12, 2004
10,897
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Is my phone screwing with me or is there really only 47 tickets to the game left on stub hub?
 

Topgundawg

Redshirt
Oct 23, 2010
864
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Tickets fall off because of delivery / end date. There was about 500 when they dropped off. I can't understand the Rice side. Many sections tickets never came up for sell from anyone....