desprateseagull
New member
Last time I bought food / drink, a small bottle of water was £1.50.
£1.50.
£1.50.
I don't think so, similar prices to what you would pay in a pub/cafe in central Brighton. I think the beer prices are OTT though.
I went into Brighton today for a coffee and a panini was priced a 4.50.
From what I hear the quality of the pies is DECREASING as the prices are INCREASING
Own up, who has voted too cheap in the poll?
That'll be the Piglet's Pantry people who used to post on here when they pretended they cared about quality.
They must have used the railway companies for their business model.
Yeah, the prices are comparative with the rest of Brighton but, unlike the Amex, I don't pay £54 a month to be able to get into those cafes.
Well the club caterers have to pay the staff to be there, even when the outlets are shut during the match, they don't just employ them for the 15 minutes of half time and for an hour or so before and after the match so to compare them to shops and alike is a bit off as they tend to be staffed only when open. This means that costs will be higher at the ground.
Also the facilities will be used far less that a retail outlet but won't have been cheaper to supply and fit just because it's a football ground so depreciation will be factored in and increase the overheads and again they will only have very limited times that they can earn money from these facilities due to the limited nature of the business.
So i don't think that they are too expensive, and a lot of the comparisions with elsewhere don't reflect the true situation the club and the caterers face on a matchday.
A lot of the moaning about prices seems a bit like the elderly who used to moan 20 years ago+ that things were so much cheaper when they were a 20 years younger and give examples like they remember when beer was tuppence ha'penny a pint.
The reality is simple, prices go up as you get older because the value of money in comparison goes down so it costs more. Also the more people earn, the more it costs to make or sell things due to increased overheads, making the end product more expensive and there are a lot of basic economic factors that are forgotten about when thinking about the costs of stuff nowadays when comparing to things in the past. You simply get less for your £ than you used to due to things like inflation.
How much is a pie at the ground really? When the average national wage of a person working full time is £26,500 the cost of a pie at the ground is just a miniscule fraction of that wage and the extra 10p it costs compared to last season is an even smaller amount (about 1/265,000th of that average wage extra)
Don't complain about the pies. They are helping us keep within FFP.
Bit of an odd comparison to make - Do the cafes in the rest of Brighton also offer the chance to watch live football matches on their premises?
i am not a cash cow to be milked whenever I come into contact with BHAFC.