Home > Football > Please come and watch us...please!
by CaughtOffside.com on 13 October 2006
Email this Article (5) Comments
Free £10 bet when you register at
Football is becoming a more expensive hobby every season with London clubs seemingly the worst offenders for extortionate entry fees. A ticket to see a Chelsea match will come in at somewhere between £35 and £60, although even this isn’t the most expensive seat on a Saturday afternoon with Tottenham angering their fans by charging up to £70 for a chance to see some high-class entertainment (?). Similarly at Upton Park the most expensive match-day ticket is £53, which is more than twice the comparable price at their recently promoted counterparts, Wigan. A fan could watch Paul Jewell’s men from as little as £17, the lowest price in the Premiership. I’m not debating the fact that a higher average wage in the south of the country helps to contribute to this pricing structure but is that reason enough for such a drastic variation.
Blackburn chairman John Williams has decided to take this step after much discussion with fans following an alarming in drop in attendances at Ewood Park where the average has dropped over 1,500 from last season – and they were hardly attracting full houses even then. Williams said:
“Normally clubs may discount what they view as a low profile game but we are doing something radically different here because this is a Lancashire derby and a match fans want to see.“We are hoping for a full house as both sides have started the season well and all the feedback from supporters is they want to watch games in packed stadiums because it creates a better atmosphere.”
“Normally clubs may discount what they view as a low profile game but we are doing something radically different here because this is a Lancashire derby and a match fans want to see.
“We are hoping for a full house as both sides have started the season well and all the feedback from supporters is they want to watch games in packed stadiums because it creates a better atmosphere.”
Is this innovative idea something that fans from other clubs would like to see brought in at their club? Would this help to increase attendances all over the country, particularly in predominantly working-class areas? Would season ticket holders feel like they are missing out? Would fans, players and board members all be happy to have a better atmosphere with more fans? Or would you have to stage the game in some people’s back gardens to drag them out of the pubs and back to the stadiums?
You’d be hard pressed to find a supporter who wouldn’t want to see the game once again become accessible to the everyman, but it might be a while before such fan-friendly, initiatives find their way to the rest of the Premiership.
Check out reaction to this article
Comments (5)
by zack on October 13, 2006
The cost of going to any sport events has become redicolus, that is true not only for Premership but for just about any leading sport around the world. This seems to be the negative side effect of the global commercilazation of sport. Teams need to remmeber that they are first and formost about the fans and find ways to reward their most loyal fans not neccesserly the fans that come and go because it is more fashinable to watch the game. Here is a new idea, have the price go down for fans that say with the team over time
by inbal on October 13, 2006
If I am not mistaken, Arsenal's move to the Emirates has put their ticket prices even above spurs and Chelski. Reducing prices will definitely help, but it will come only after another slump in attendances. Unfortunately, overseas interest in the Premiership makes foreigners pay over the top to clubs and touts, which only fuels the increase in price.
by harry the hornet on October 13, 2006
brilliant article. this is how foiotball should be..working class theatre, not opera for the middle classes. ticket prices are a disgrace and blackburn are setting a fine example. well written
by Eric on October 13, 2006
Good on you, Blackburn! It's obscene that fans should be fleeced just to pay the obscenely high wages of prima donna footballers. £70 to watch Chelsea? I'm going to the Sunderland v Cardiff game in a couple of weeks...it's costing me just £14 for a seat in the South Stand and £8 for my 15-year-old granddaughter. I know it's a division lower than Chelsea but I bet we'll be better entertained than at Stamford Bridge - and a lot better off!
by Pete Christopher on October 15, 2006
Surely if people want to pay the highest price it is up to them; the article should highlight the lowest costs at each club as it does with Wigan, but then compare that to the lowest at Chelsea, Spurs, Arsenal etc. Charlton usually charge £20 for most matches, and that in London is very comparable to, if not better, than Wigan's £17 price!
Add your comment here
PERSONAL ABUSE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED
First Name
Last Name
Email
Heading
Display your favourite sport or football team badge with your comment.
Sport
League
Team
Comment *
Please enter the text you see in the picture into the textbox below. *
England must scrape the bottom and turn to Spurs for wide-left salvation
Spurs go one better than Barcelona in Krakow – now bring on Hull City!
Ouch! The TOP TEN freak sports injuries
Arsenal Champions League Chelsea Cricket news Euroleague Fantasy football Football news Formula 1 Liverpool Manchester United NBA Newcastle United Premier League Sports news Tottenham Hotspur Transfer rumours Twenty20 UEFA UEFA Champions League
© SportBuzz All rights reserved 2008 Sportingo- Sports News & Sports Articles site. Sportingo delivers fresh sports news and analysis by fans-Football News, Tennis News, Rugby Union News, Rugby League, Cricket News, Cycling News, Basketball News and other Sports TV. XML Sitemap 2008.