I think the thrust of your point is reasonable - though you are asking for a considered match-by-match manual process - more work for somebody - to fix something that they will consider not to be broken.Not deliberately, no. We had 24 away games in cup and league last season - I don’t think it’s far-fetched to suggest ‘only’ doing 14/15 would fail to put you in the top tier for Luton. I know people who did 11 and they weren’t close to the 381 threshold.
Out of interest what did you make of the rest of my response? Not being cagey just genuinely curious as I’m trying to see both sides.
The example figures I used were for a match with 3,000 away tickets, rather than 1,000, but the principles are exactly the same. The system as it is offers the available seats to that exact number of fans with the very most points, then offers a CHANCE of the remaining ones to all the people with regular away attendance (our definitions of 'regular' might not align).
I support this current approach - it rightly rewards the absolute fanatics who devote ALL their free time and money to following the club, but also keeps a reasonably broad group of fans 'in the game' and thus part of the amazing journey we are currently on.
The argument to narrow the Tier 2 band is not one that can ever be 'won'. Whatever arbitrary cut offs you choose, somebody will always just miss out, and somebody will always just scrape in. Someone will always argue that the chosen tier values are unfair.
The ultimate end-game of the opposite stand-point (to my own) is a system whereby every fan who wants a ticket applies, and provides their card details, and the computer sells them (at the predetermined 'sale' time) to the exact applicants with the most loyalty points. If there are 1,250 seats, the 1,250 'most deserving' fans will get them, and so on. Nobody could argue that system was 'unfair', but it would disenfranchise 10,000 or so Albion fans who attend a handful of away games per season, and would absolutely not be in the club's long term best interests.