Doug on CWR (3 Viewers)

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Agree with him on ‘other events’ being horrendously priced. But he’s using it as a wildly out of touch comparison, and just another pants justification.

Although I don’t agree with the pricing as such people are paying it so how is he out of touch?
 

Ccfcisparks

Well-Known Member
Although I don’t agree with the pricing as such people are paying it so how is he out of touch?
Yes this is what I don't really get. Season ticket is where you get the value. Its the same in any line of business, if you commit you get a better deal. Then if theres scarcity on remaining product its priced at a premium.
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
Agree with him on ‘other events’ being horrendously priced. But he’s using it as a wildly out of touch comparison, and just another pants justification.

It certainly ly doesn't stand up as a comparison.
A football game is not like the Cheltenham festival which is not like an Oasis concert which is not like F1 and so on and so on.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
It certainly ly doesn't stand up as a comparison.
A football game is not like the Cheltenham festival which is not like an Oasis concert which is not like F1 and so on and so on.

An average concert costs £50 at small venues. No concessions. These purchasers are occasional buyers. It’s £250 minimum for F1
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I’m going to see a band called Raising Sands in December it’s £97
 

David O'Day

Well-Known Member
There's 2 different arguments

The financial argument overwhelming says it is the right thing to do for a loss making business to increase revenue and yes people are paying this.

Then there is the moral argument and sadly it a capitalist world that is always going to be 2nd to the financial argument.
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
An average concert costs £50 at small venues. No concessions. These purchasers are occasional buyers. It’s £250 minimum for F1

Occasional attending kids are potentially ST holders of the future.
As I keep saying, I don't blame King, but it's not a good strategy for building future fanbase. That's not his issue, I get that.

But at some point the product won't be as attractive as it is now, that's when our crowds will be tested.
 

Great_Expectations

Well-Known Member
Am I the only one who has no idea, nor care, what other fans think of us?

I couldn’t tell you what your average fan of <insert any team> thinks of us.

I’m not on Twitter and I barely use my personal social media accounts, so I don’t see the stuff online. But even if I did, who cares.

We all know the “journey” we’ve been on, and we all know how good it’ll feel when we finally get promoted.
 

robbiethemole

Well-Known Member
From Doug's interview:-

King said he knows people highlight the presence of the top-flight cap on away ticket prices but added there are other factors that make that decision easier - namely the new £6.7bn TV rights deal that sees the club finishing bottom of the Premier League this season receiving around £120m.

Fuck me!!!! all that dosh for being a failure, plus a share of the TV money during the season plus however much you get from being promoted, c £150m.. One year of that??? YES PLEASE
 

Sky Blue Goblin

Well-Known Member
From Doug's interview:-

King said he knows people highlight the presence of the top-flight cap on away ticket prices but added there are other factors that make that decision easier - namely the new £6.7bn TV rights deal that sees the club finishing bottom of the Premier League this season receiving around £120m.

Fuck me!!!! all that dosh for being a failure, plus a share of the TV money during the season plus however much you get from being promoted, c £150m.. One year of that??? YES PLEASE
It’s just mental isn’t it.

Last year with all our income including player sales we made £30ish million before deductions if I remember correctly.

If we go up we suddenly get 4 times that in tv rights alone neglecting sponsorship deals, and ticket sales.
 

Sbarcher

Well-Known Member
Agree with him on ‘other events’ being horrendously priced. But he’s using it as a wildly out of touch comparison, and just another pants justification.
Agree - there's no way I'm going to Stratford to watch As You Like It 23 times a year!
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member

Ccfcisparks

Well-Known Member
No they won't. But as I said in an earlier post, occasionally attending kids are potential ST holders of the future.

I don't think it's good for the club to have the leagues highest kids prices. Might make us a few extra quid now while things are going well......
Well occcasionally attending kids fits into Grendels once in a while concert analogy.
 

pusbccfc

Well-Known Member
An average concert costs £50 at small venues. No concessions. These purchasers are occasional buyers. It’s £250 minimum for F1

They aren't comparable.

You see a band once a year. If you go to see multiple bands, they are often different prices.

I go to a lot of shows for 20-30 quid. I also go to one or two major stadium shows a year for £80-£120.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
They aren't comparable.

You see a band once a year. If you go to see multiple bands, they are often different prices.

I go to a lot of shows for 20-30 quid. I also go to one or two major stadium shows a year for £80-£120.

I don't see "major" acts much anymore, too expensive. However, for my big birthday, I did buy a few tickets and was horrified how much they were nowadays: Shack (£45), Kraftwerk (£100!) and Haircut 100 (£40).

Regardless of those prices, particularly Kraftwerk, can't help thinking that anything over £30 for a football match (whatever level) is pretty ridiculous.
 

CCFC_Irish

Well-Known Member
If it is a sell out with these £45 tickets then expect to see it more in the future. If he has to increase ticket prices to reduce the operating loss then so be it.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
It’s just mental isn’t it.

Last year with all our income including player sales we made £30ish million before deductions if I remember correctly.

If we go up we suddenly get 4 times that in tv rights alone neglecting sponsorship deals, and ticket sales.

This is it. In the PL the economics are entirely different. Ticket revenues are a much smaller percentage of your income. It’s shit that we’ve got a division with high wage requirements to compete and not enough TV funding to cover them but that’s the deal.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
They aren't comparable.

You see a band once a year. If you go to see multiple bands, they are often different prices.

I go to a lot of shows for 20-30 quid. I also go to one or two major stadium shows a year for £80-£120.

Im actually seeing them twice in a week
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
No they won't. But as I said in an earlier post, occasionally attending kids are potential ST holders of the future.

I don't think it's good for the club to have the leagues highest kids prices. Might make us a few extra quid now while things are going well......

Wont some games be much cheaper?
 

Ccfcisparks

Well-Known Member
Some are but because they are doing the games in batches of 5 , they are deciding the prices on the go .
Long story short the better we do the less chance of the cheapo tickets
I mean the better we do the less chance of cheap tickets isnt too controversial imo its the same for any club surely?
 

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