highwayman
Knows Less Than PJ Fleck
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Are U Athletics geared toward the rich? Are Gopher tickets expensive or cheap?
I went off topic in another thread and I apologize. Let's pick it up here. I responded to the following posts with my following post:
I had the same reaction, but didn't reply. We are on the low-end of catering to "the rich", here in self-loathing, passive-agressive Minnesota. We want success, but we hate those who succeed. We want a bigger, better program, but we don't want any income generation that caters to "the rich".
We have one of the cheapest season tickets in the BCS. We have some of the lowest seat licenses in the BCS. Our athletic department has to pay back the U for scholarships.
It takes money to make money. We are nowhere near wealthy, but we consider every dime we spend on Gopher football as an INVESTMENT in the future of this program--our GLC membership, the season tickets, the seat licenses, the $50 a month to the stadium fund. We even "sponsored a hole" at the GLC golf event for the ridiculous price of $200--that money went to the promotional films budget, the "Webisodes". A pair of sideline passes go for a couple hundred bucks at auction. Try that at Michigan, Notre Dame, or even Iowa.
We do this so that "voila!" the students can have a place to tailgate--yup, your money goes to that, too.
Sorry, didn't want to hijack this thread, but this elitist BS is ridiculous. I am excited for the students, and excited for the future of Gopher football. I am in favor of anything (legal) that helps this program succeed--anything. I hope we can cater the sh!t out of "the rich".
That was followed by this:
A quick analysis:
We will leave out private boxes, etc. as all teams have those. Per game, Gopher tickets are a base $39, with general seating seat licenses bringing some seats to $54, $75, and $111. I don't know what our average price is. Help here? Parking is generally $25 per game.
If you have 4 tickets in the $250 license area, your contribution level is met for parking two blocks away...and it's tax deductable. Also, I mentioned my $50 per month stadium contribution ($600 a year), which almost meets the thousand, and is also tax deductable. Is this also part of the discussion?
Vikings tickets are for 10 games, two of which are meaningless exhibition games. Don't hate me, but I think those games don't count. If the NFL went to 9 regular season home games, you think ticket prices would stay the same? According to multiple sources, the range is $29 - $103, average ticket price $77 for 10 games. Throw out the exhibition games and it's $97 per game. Parking is generally $20.
You may go to it on T-Wolves; a vastly inferior product, the Wild; a middling product, and the Twins; a good to superior product. I did my part...I realize the Twins have a massive amount of ticket plans.
In the end, I would like to have a discussion on "value" as much as "cheapness".
I went off topic in another thread and I apologize. Let's pick it up here. I responded to the following posts with my following post:
It's good that they do a little something for the students. The football experience at the U has been catering to rich alumni for many years.
Catering to the rich?
I had the same reaction, but didn't reply. We are on the low-end of catering to "the rich", here in self-loathing, passive-agressive Minnesota. We want success, but we hate those who succeed. We want a bigger, better program, but we don't want any income generation that caters to "the rich".
We have one of the cheapest season tickets in the BCS. We have some of the lowest seat licenses in the BCS. Our athletic department has to pay back the U for scholarships.
It takes money to make money. We are nowhere near wealthy, but we consider every dime we spend on Gopher football as an INVESTMENT in the future of this program--our GLC membership, the season tickets, the seat licenses, the $50 a month to the stadium fund. We even "sponsored a hole" at the GLC golf event for the ridiculous price of $200--that money went to the promotional films budget, the "Webisodes". A pair of sideline passes go for a couple hundred bucks at auction. Try that at Michigan, Notre Dame, or even Iowa.
We do this so that "voila!" the students can have a place to tailgate--yup, your money goes to that, too.
Sorry, didn't want to hijack this thread, but this elitist BS is ridiculous. I am excited for the students, and excited for the future of Gopher football. I am in favor of anything (legal) that helps this program succeed--anything. I hope we can cater the sh!t out of "the rich".
That was followed by this:
Say what you want, but I can go to a Timberwolves game cheaper than a Gophers basketball game, and I can go to a Vikings game cheaper than a Gophers football game. Tickets aren't cheap, tailgating is expensive, parking is restrictive...what used to be cheap entertainment is now too expensive for a lot of people to do more than once or twice a year.
It's funny to me that my earlier comment would be construed as class jealousy. I'm not rich, but I'm as conservative a Republican as you'll find, and I'd like to be rich as much as anybody. I guess I'll just invest in lottery tickets, sit on the floor of my shanty, and hope for the best.![]()
A quick analysis:
We will leave out private boxes, etc. as all teams have those. Per game, Gopher tickets are a base $39, with general seating seat licenses bringing some seats to $54, $75, and $111. I don't know what our average price is. Help here? Parking is generally $25 per game.
If you have 4 tickets in the $250 license area, your contribution level is met for parking two blocks away...and it's tax deductable. Also, I mentioned my $50 per month stadium contribution ($600 a year), which almost meets the thousand, and is also tax deductable. Is this also part of the discussion?
Vikings tickets are for 10 games, two of which are meaningless exhibition games. Don't hate me, but I think those games don't count. If the NFL went to 9 regular season home games, you think ticket prices would stay the same? According to multiple sources, the range is $29 - $103, average ticket price $77 for 10 games. Throw out the exhibition games and it's $97 per game. Parking is generally $20.
You may go to it on T-Wolves; a vastly inferior product, the Wild; a middling product, and the Twins; a good to superior product. I did my part...I realize the Twins have a massive amount of ticket plans.
In the end, I would like to have a discussion on "value" as much as "cheapness".