- Dec 28, 2004
- 935
- 92
This
Yeah, I'm actually in College Station so games I go to will be an hour and change drive each way.
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This
Jealous of you guys who live in your teams city man. I only get to watch mine once a year and it bothers me to no end.
I used to be a season ticket holder for the Nets. I remember we got VIP passes to get into the arena early & meet the players for the Nets & opposing teams during the individual shoot arounds. We easily met like 95% of the league including former players who worked with the teams like Earl Monroe, Walt Frazier, Dominique Wilkins, etc. Even met Hov a couple times
We also had access to restaurants in the arena & if you bought the all access card, you would get unlimited food & drinks all game.
There's also a bunch of season ticket holder events such as meet & greets too.
Its cool being a season ticket holder because there's of course the perks, but its also cool just getting familiar with everyone since you see the same people around you every game. Supporting your team at every home game is a cool experience.
Work Ops for both the Dodgers and USC. Comp tix come in handy
Also have a set of USC season tickets. Break even with "weak" opponents. Heavy profit for Notre Dame/UCLA/Oregon/Stanford.
Thunder STH since 09' ****'em, they raised prices every year since. And they try to trick you into not going to the meet and greets because our owners are cheap and they give out free hot dogs, soda, and bottled water there so every person who doesn't show up saves them like $2.50.
Like everyone said, best benefit is playoff priority. Resell the games you can't attend on the ticketexchange makes you do the least amount of work, stubhub/cl/ebay you at least have to log in and convert it to a .pdf then upload it.
I don't do day of meets to sell tickets, people will make an agreement with you then keep looking and find another deal and not tell you and then you show up at the game and now you got extra tickets you have to liquidate before you can go in. I live an hour from OKC so I usually tell them Paypal me and I'll email it, or if it's a ticket I bought outside of my season ticket then still prepay me and meet me there.
Finals though, I was in Atlanta last yr during the finals and made the major comeup. $91 ticket, sold both game 1 and game 2 for $1250 EACH.
Y'alls arena is huge. Them 400 levels, I'm not about that life. I was in 124 when I went to game 3 a few weeks ago.
Came very close to getting out this yr. I'm not satisfied with ownership's commitment to winning instead of just being as profitable as possible. I'll probably do this year and if they even think about another price hike, I'm out. Thing about it though and I don't know how most arenas do it but I bet it's less than half, 75% of our arena is season ticket owned. Then you have 200 set aside for the Rewards Zone contest every game, like 500 for the player giveaways to schools and foundations, group sales holds about a thousand, the opposing team gets X amount, etc. so there is literally close to no availability at box office price when they release on Ticketmaster. Because of this demand > supply and it's always worth having to even just resell. Last I heard, the season ticket list was over 4,000 names deep and that's not 4,000 tickets, that's names.
But again, I've been upset with Presti and Bennett for a while so I might just decide to not support them or let someone else buy the whole package from me at face and they can forego the line altogether
And no I have never had problem getting at least face value for them, even when the Pistons come in town on a Tuesday. Also STH face is 20% cheaper than then the single game purchase face so if you are looking for tickets, which is the other aspect of owning, it's always a better deal to find a STH at the last minute who will just take face over even buying it off ticketmaster. It's like playing stocks, sell high, buy low (hours before the game)
I used to be a season ticket holder for the Nets. I remember we got VIP passes to get into the arena early & meet the players for the Nets & opposing teams during the individual shoot arounds. We easily met like 95% of the league including former players who worked with the teams like Earl Monroe, Walt Frazier, Dominique Wilkins, etc. Even met Hov a couple times
We also had access to restaurants in the arena & if you bought the all access card, you would get unlimited food & drinks all game.
There's also a bunch of season ticket holder events such as meet & greets too.
Its cool being a season ticket holder because there's of course the perks, but its also cool just getting familiar with everyone since you see the same people around you every game. Supporting your team at every home game is a cool experience.
How cheap were season tickets cheap when they were in Jersey? I tried getting a pair of tickets for Brooklyn but prices are OD especially since I wasn't trying to be sitiing in the rafters. I started being a Bucs STH last year and some of the perks have been 15% off food, drinks and team memorabilia/apparel. Also meet and greets and attending private training camps. My view.
Plan on being a NY Giants season tix holder eventually. For the peeps who have NBA/MLB, how many games do you intend on going to appx?
I have a good source that says Thunder actually have the highest % of season ticket ownership in the entire league, it's above 90%. The next 2 teams are the Knicks and Warriors.Came very close to getting out this yr. I'm not satisfied with ownership's commitment to winning instead of just being as profitable as possible. I'll probably do this year and if they even think about another price hike, I'm out. Thing about it though and I don't know how most arenas do it but I bet it's less than half, 75% of our arena is season ticket owned. Then you have 200 set aside for the Rewards Zone contest every game, like 500 for the player giveaways to schools and foundations, group sales holds about a thousand, the opposing team gets X amount, etc. so there is literally close to no availability at box office price when they release on Ticketmaster. Because of this demand > supply and it's always worth having to even just resell. Last I heard, the season ticket list was over 4,000 names deep and that's not 4,000 tickets, that's names.
But again, I've been upset with Presti and Bennett for a while so I might just decide to not support them or let someone else buy the whole package from me at face and they can forego the line altogether
And no I have never had problem getting at least face value for them, even when the Pistons come in town on a Tuesday. Also STH face is 20% cheaper than then the single game purchase face so if you are looking for tickets, which is the other aspect of owning, it's always a better deal to find a STH at the last minute who will just take face over even buying it off ticketmaster. It's like playing stocks, sell high, buy low (hours before the game)
I'm 100% sure that is not correct and the number is 13,500 which would be about 75% of 18,206. Now what it might be is to say, 90% of tickets are already accounted for. Since after the 13,500 you have group tickets holds ~1,500, you have 100 held for the first 50 people to stand outside and wait get a pair for $25 contest, maybe another 500 for all the "KD foundation has purchased 100 tickets for kids from such and such local inner city school," contributions, the opposing teams gets a small number probably around 100, and so forth. So basically whenever there is a ticketmaster 10am release, inventory/availibility is almost 0 so nobody scores anything, kind of like online Jordan releases.Wait, so 90% of the attendance is of season ticket holders???
The Thunder, being the cheapasses they are, are trying to faze out printing and mailing paper tickets. Like all of their optional cost cutting measures, if you don't respond in time you opt into whatever most benefits them, in this case no longer receiving printed tickets and the souvenir box and first game ticket with lanyard. Saves them like 6 bucks per personWaiting for your tickets in the mail is torture.
The Nats did the same thing, they gave us electronic cards to scan now, which is kinda convenient I guess but I don't really like it. It was also a disaster on Opening Day since they hadn't fixed all the kinks in the system with it yet.I'm 100% sure that is not correct and the number is 13,500 which would be about 75% of 18,206. Now what it might be is to say, 90% of tickets are already accounted for. Since after the 13,500 you have group tickets holds ~1,500, you have 100 held for the first 50 people to stand outside and wait get a pair for $25 contest, maybe another 500 for all the "KD foundation has purchased 100 tickets for kids from such and such local inner city school," contributions, the opposing teams gets a small number probably around 100, and so forth. So basically whenever there is a ticketmaster 10am release, inventory/availibility is almost 0 so nobody scores anything, kind of like online Jordan releases.
The reason is because we pay the highest or 2nd highest (read an article from some ticket aggregator site) markup from face value to market value, so even if you have no intentions to go or can't afford it, it'd benefit you more to just keep them and resell, especially the yr we made the finals and I hit my game 1 and game 2 tickets, $96 face for me, for $1,250 each.
The Thunder, being the cheapasses they are, are trying to faze out printing and mailing paper tickets. Like all of their optional cost cutting measures, if you don't respond in time you opt into whatever most benefits them, in this case no longer receiving printed tickets and the souvenir box and first game ticket with lanyard. Saves them like 6 bucks per person