zac naloen I don't really like it in the south stand...
Neither do I! The scramble for the toilets/food/drink at half time is a joke.
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Dec 2007 15:57
zac naloen I don't really like it in the south stand...
by Skyline » 19 Dec 2007 17:08
Schards#2 errr..........Sunderland's kids for a quid mate, and Portsmouth is a local derby on a bank holiday.
by Royal Lady » 19 Dec 2007 17:12
by The 17 Bus » 19 Dec 2007 19:47
Royal Lady Tell it to Mr Mad not us!
by Royal Lady » 19 Dec 2007 19:51
by The 17 Bus » 19 Dec 2007 19:57
by weybridgewanderer » 19 Dec 2007 20:26
by Royal Lady » 19 Dec 2007 21:45
And just to point out for the nth time - the fact they have realised that the Sunderland game isn't as popular as some and have resorted to kids for a quid - surely shows that demand has FALLEN which is all we've been saying in the first blooming place.SkylineSchards#2 errr..........Sunderland's kids for a quid mate, and Portsmouth is a local derby on a bank holiday.
So the ticket office realised that the Sunderland fixture might not be as popular as some, so they put on a ticket offer. Surely they should be praised for that? As some have said repeatedly, an expanded stadium will allow for more flexibility in ticketing, it's good to see that they're trying it and it's working.
Pompey was always likely to be close to a sell-out - it's the closest we have to a local derby now. But that's not really the point, is it? The point is that it is another game where we could, in all likelihood, sell more tickets than we've got the capacity for at the moment. There's probably at least seven of those at the moment - the 'big four' along with Pompey, WHam, and probably Tottenham. You could possibly make an argument for Newcastle as well. That's a third of the league games taken care of already, probably more than enough to justify the expansion.
No-one has said that we're going to sell out every single game, but we are consistently selling 95%+ of the home seats at the moment, even with very few tickets available for non-STH, which in turn means a lot of people probably don't even bother trying to get one. 6000 extra seats on the East Stand would mean that the whole of the South Stand could be given to the teams that could sell it, and the club would still have 4000 extra seats for home fans above what we have now, making it worthwhile for them to go out and advertise and introduce the flexible ticketing that some have talked about.
by Royal With Cheese » 19 Dec 2007 23:23
Royal LadyAnd just to point out for the nth time - the fact they have realised that the Sunderland game isn't as popular as some and have resorted to kids for a quid - surely shows that demand has FALLEN which is all we've been saying in the first blooming place.SkylineSchards#2 errr..........Sunderland's kids for a quid mate, and Portsmouth is a local derby on a bank holiday.
So the ticket office realised that the Sunderland fixture might not be as popular as some, so they put on a ticket offer. Surely they should be praised for that? As some have said repeatedly, an expanded stadium will allow for more flexibility in ticketing, it's good to see that they're trying it and it's working.
Pompey was always likely to be close to a sell-out - it's the closest we have to a local derby now. But that's not really the point, is it? The point is that it is another game where we could, in all likelihood, sell more tickets than we've got the capacity for at the moment. There's probably at least seven of those at the moment - the 'big four' along with Pompey, WHam, and probably Tottenham. You could possibly make an argument for Newcastle as well. That's a third of the league games taken care of already, probably more than enough to justify the expansion.
No-one has said that we're going to sell out every single game, but we are consistently selling 95%+ of the home seats at the moment, even with very few tickets available for non-STH, which in turn means a lot of people probably don't even bother trying to get one. 6000 extra seats on the East Stand would mean that the whole of the South Stand could be given to the teams that could sell it, and the club would still have 4000 extra seats for home fans above what we have now, making it worthwhile for them to go out and advertise and introduce the flexible ticketing that some have talked about.
by Schards#2 » 20 Dec 2007 08:47
by Wycombe Royal » 20 Dec 2007 08:54
by Jerry St Clair » 20 Dec 2007 09:22
Wycombe Royal THis is the last Saturday before Christmas against unattractive opposition. I am surprised that it has even got close to selling out even with the kids for a quid offer.
by Schards#2 » 20 Dec 2007 09:22
Wycombe Royal THis is the last Saturday before Christmas against unattractive opposition. I am surprised that it has even got close to selling out even with the kids for a quid offer.
by Wycombe Royal » 20 Dec 2007 09:34
Schards#2Wycombe Royal THis is the last Saturday before Christmas against unattractive opposition. I am surprised that it has even got close to selling out even with the kids for a quid offer.
It's only 3,000 off of selling out before they've sold a single ticket.
by Riseley » 20 Dec 2007 10:25
by readingbedding » 20 Dec 2007 12:24
by Riseley » 23 Dec 2007 12:10
by Wycombe Royal » 23 Dec 2007 20:09
Riseley Huge numbers of empty seats yesterday despite our second best attendance of the season. Methinks putting Mike Lewis in charge of gate receipts is a splendid idea.
by PEARCEY » 27 Dec 2007 18:03
Riseley Huge numbers of empty seats yesterday despite our second best attendance of the season. Methinks putting Mike Lewis in charge of gate receipts is a splendid idea. Even Woodcote can see that expansion is as dead as my Xmas dinner.
by Coppelled Streets » 27 Dec 2007 22:49
PEARCEYRiseley Huge numbers of empty seats yesterday despite our second best attendance of the season. Methinks putting Mike Lewis in charge of gate receipts is a splendid idea. Even Woodcote can see that expansion is as dead as my Xmas dinner.
Not sure what your definition of "huge numbers" is but clearly it cannot amount to more than a few hundred in a stadium which houses a capacity of over 24000...so in other words the stadium was around 99% full.
Not sure I follow your logic.
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