- Aug 8, 2005
- 27,217
Good point, I had that Friday feeling a day early!!It's tier 3 204+ today. All STH tomorrow, but it might well get there too.
Good point, I had that Friday feeling a day early!!It's tier 3 204+ today. All STH tomorrow, but it might well get there too.
It goes to all STH tomorrow. The closed shop is in tickets for the high demand games. By earning points for unattended games people preserve their right to tickets at the London and other big games. This has been explained so many times and is never answered.
I’m repeating what the club say they know is happening. I’m thinking they are a better source than you are. Anyway, the club have solved the problem so all is good.realistically how many people who are already in the higher tiers don't go to games they have tickets for. I think this is massively overstated. But carry on, because you will.
You got that bit right.I’m repeating what the club say they know is happening. I’m thinking they are a better source than you are. Anyway, the club have solved the problem so all is good.
This is what it reads on the ticket page for Wolves tickets.I’m repeating what the club say they know is happening. I’m thinking they are a better source than you are. Anyway, the club have solved the problem so all is good.
You say that but this thread was posted by somebody who doesn’t like the new rules. I have never started a thread on the subject but if people are going to keep arguing for a return of their rights to pass on their tickets to the people they choose then I am going to keep arguing against that and in favour of those tickets going to the next people in the queue. You’re a moderator aren’t you ? That’s how the forum you moderate works.You got that bit right.
Great. So combined with the fact that there are significant penalties for passing on tickets and random checks to ensure compliance we shouldn’t have a problem any more.This is what it reads on the ticket page for Wolves tickets.
Points allocated for this fixture*: 10
*will be credited 7 days after the match based on attendance data from the away club
Speaking anecdotally, before the change it felt like for most away games someone I know would be asking in WhatsApp groups etc if anyone wasn't going, as they had a mate who would like to come along. Nearly always someone would put their hand up and a ticket was bought for the mate. I can't believe the various groups I am in are unique in that regard.realistically how many people who are already in the higher tiers don't go to games they have tickets for. I think this is massively overstated. But carry on, because you will.
After Bournemouth-Harvesting-Gate the club announced that wherever possible data would be taken from host club's entrance systems and points only credited to those who had attended a fixture.This is what it reads on the ticket page for Wolves tickets.
Points allocated for this fixture*: 10
*will be credited 7 days after the match based on attendance data from the away club
I agree with this. It definitely did happen a lot. However I personally don't think there was many buying with no intention of going. The tickets are normally sold so far ahead of the game that things change. We typically buy for 5 of us, occasionally one of us couldn't go so yes we offered to another Brighton fan we knew if that happened. We don't now. I guess the big question is are we still buying all 5 tickets or trying to make sure we can all go first. I guess you're right that we are probably being more cautious about just buying them regardless now, so that probably is helping those lower down the tiers.Speaking anecdotally, before the change it felt like for most away games someone I know would be asking in WhatsApp groups etc if anyone wasn't going, as they had a mate who would like to come along. Nearly always someone would put their hand up and a ticket was bought for the mate. I can't believe the various groups I am in are unique in that regard.
I think you're conflating two different things...I agree with this. It definitely did happen a lot. However I personally don't think there was many buying with no intention of going. The tickets are normally sold so far ahead of the game that things change. We typically buy for 5 of us, occasionally one of us couldn't go so yes we offered to another Brighton fan we knew if that happened. We don't now. I guess the big question is are we still buying all 5 tickets or trying to make sure we can all go first. I guess you're right that we are probably being more cautious about just buying them regardless now, so that probably is helping those lower down the tiers.
Not sure I agree. I'm aware of plenty of T1/T2 STHs who would buy a ticket for every away game, safe in the knowledge they could offload it to someone and keep the points. The checks have pretty much killed that off which is a good thing.I agree with this. It definitely did happen a lot. However I personally don't think there was many buying with no intention of going. The tickets are normally sold so far ahead of the game that things change. We typically buy for 5 of us, occasionally one of us couldn't go so yes we offered to another Brighton fan we knew if that happened. We don't now. I guess the big question is are we still buying all 5 tickets or trying to make sure we can all go first. I guess you're right that we are probably being more cautious about just buying them regardless now, so that probably is helping those lower down the tiers.
Charlton - absolute shit show, ruined pre match build up, as 1) heard online there was problems so left my group an hour earlier 2) didn’t get in until after KOWe seem to be going over old ground on the names on tickets.
I just wonder what everyone's experience has been since names on tickets was introduced.
My experience has been
Brentford had to collect ticket and show ID
Middlesbrough and Arsenal had to collect tickets due to postal issues,
Wolves had to show ID
Palace had to show ID along with everyone else
So not really a huge problem.
I think 1) is pretty much dealt with now and the club have a well communicated process in place and Tony's points system mostly works well. ( @Bozza 's point yesterday about adopting Liverpool's transparency re: ticket allocation would be a great addition. However still some edge cases where what seems reasonable to most - is not according to the club - and the sanctions are in certain cases extremely draconian. (eg: 10 match bans - no mitigation) . The asking some to show up at ticket offices in advance of games still feels heavy handed to me/not a great customer experience to say the least - however effective or minimal but perhaps thats the easiest way to enforce this.I think you're conflating two different things...
1. Giving all fans the chance to buy a ticket at their appropriate time.
2. How to deal with the situation when legitimately bought tickets are no longer required.
This will be resolved with digital ticketing but it needs all clubs to be on board. Maybe someone should ask Barber to raise this as the next EPL shareholders meeting.2) This is poor. Club have no clear fair system in place. - they argue i think because paper ticketing makes it expensive/process heavy - but nonetheless - a real gap.
I think that's fair and what was happening in the vast majority of cases. A group of 6, or whatever, all got tickets on day 1, knowing that if they couldn't go themselves they could sell on to a mate, or a mate of a mate.However I personally don't think there was many buying with no intention of going. The tickets are normally sold so far ahead of the game that things change.
Actually I think that’s likely a good summary of what’s changed in a lot of cases. Before the new rules it was an easy decision to buy a ticket even if plans weren’t definite. Maybe the ticket buyer went, maybe not and if the latter then the ticket could be passed on. Some were sold on and others given but either way the ticket holder accumulated the loyalty points. Now the passing on is penalized so people think carefully at the point of purchase about how many tickets they actually want to use. I guess people could still buy tickets and leave them unused and still keep their points tally up but far fewer would be prepared to waste money in this way and as the club has attendance data it could bring in rules to deter this if it chooses.I agree with this. It definitely did happen a lot. However I personally don't think there was many buying with no intention of going. The tickets are normally sold so far ahead of the game that things change. We typically buy for 5 of us, occasionally one of us couldn't go so yes we offered to another Brighton fan we knew if that happened. We don't now. I guess the big question is are we still buying all 5 tickets or trying to make sure we can all go first. I guess you're right that we are probably being more cautious about just buying them regardless now, so that probably is helping those lower down the tiers.
To answer my own question....completely pointless!I also don't know how it is going to work practically either. At the moment if you want to buy a ticket for someone other than the named account you have assign them via friends and family which works as intended and quite well IMO. Are 1901ers now going to have a textbox to fill in each time they buy an away ticket? Guess we'll find out tomorrow when Wolves goes on sale.