Its not and it isn't.
Indeed, not since withdean!
Its not and it isn't.
admistration charge--u are using the clubs staff resources ?--spelling naffWhy is there a need to have a limit? Anyone think of a good reason?
admistration charge--u are using the clubs staff resources ?--spelling naff
I get the club would rather have an adult ST than a child because the ticket costs considerably more.
Given the evidence on this thread (and my own daughter's ticket, who doesn't live with me so can't get to every game, is upgraded from time to time) - I reckon there is a pretty high volume of kids' tickets which are upgraded on a game by game basis, some quite frequently it seems. As others have said, if you have hit the 6 game limit at the beginning of November, it does suggest it should be an adult ticket not a child ticket that you have.
The slightly disappointing attendances, given our performances and league position, could have the club studying how often this is happening. If a large number of people are getting in for c£15 per match instead of £30+ then the club are sure to want to try and address that. The question is whether those same people would pay the full match day price. Many won't.
If adults are sneaking through on child tickets that a different issue and should be addressed accordingly.
I get the club would rather have an adult ST than a child because the ticket costs considerably more.
Given the evidence on this thread (and my own daughter's ticket, who doesn't live with me so can't get to every game, is upgraded from time to time) - I reckon there is a pretty high volume of kids' tickets which are upgraded on a game by game basis, some quite frequently it seems. As others have said, if you have hit the 6 game limit at the beginning of November, it does suggest it should be an adult ticket not a child ticket that you have.
The slightly disappointing attendances, given our performances and league position, could have the club studying how often this is happening. If a large number of people are getting in for c£15 per match instead of £30+ then the club are sure to want to try and address that. The question is whether those same people would pay the full match day price. Many won't.
I have seen several times when going into WSU stewards telling people to go to the ticket office when a childs season ticket is attested to be used. Think the colour coding gives it away when you go through the barrier.
The light shines red and green instead of just green, on my ticket. I'm quite disappointed that I haven't been challenged, as I don't look old enough.
So red/green is any STH other than an adult ?
And I think the above illustrates the problem: a casual fan only had to pay £14 for a ticket for the Forest game.
Nope. Long term illness here.
What do you mean?
1) he sneaked in.
Or
2) he was invited along by others and was subsidised by them.
As is frequently the case, rules brought in to target potential mis-use often end up penalising the wrong people. Our beloved welfare system has done this time & time again. I would have thought the club would be more sympathetic if someone was to upgrade say 4 or 5 games in one go rather than match by match.
That he only had to pay £14 for the game instead of, say, £32.
You're correct in that, essentially, he had been subsidised by the season ticket I buy for my daughter who can't come to every game.
So the question is, would they have paid £32 if the £14 option wasn't available? I guess some will and some won't. If the club is now imposing this limit it suggests to me that they believe a lot of casual fans are getting in cheaply using this upgrade option and that they also believe they will gain as more will buy a match day ticket than won't when 6 match limits are reached.
To me, the slightly farcical thing is that I think the middle ground is a good compromise for everyone: for the upgrade, charge the difference between the prorated ST amount for the seat for the match and the actual match day ticket price. This would cost, in my example, c£20 and the club get full match day ticket value for the seat. The farcical aspect of this comes in that this is exactly what the old ticketing system did before the 'upgrade'. It also allowed the card to be upgraded and negated the need for a paper replacement. Another feature downgrade that came with the ticketing system 'upgrade'.
in our case and I suspect in others the new system would mean next year. They jeopardise both the child ticket and the fringe fan. Plus effect the social dynamics of football groups. Fringe fans in many scenarios do not go unless invited.
To me it doesn't make sense to the club it's not in their interest.
Let's wait for Barber to explain.