- Jul 7, 2003
- 47,639
As El Presidente has already pointed out elsewhere, this is hardly the deal of the century. Some PL clubs- he referred to Swansea as an example- charge £22 currently for visiting fans of unattractive/small teams like Crystal Palace. So this makes no difference to them.
It all smacks of a PR stunt to me. All PL clubs will be making such an extortionate amount of money out of TV rights next season that reducing match tickets to a (still-dear, IMHO) £30 is so minimal, their accountants will barely notice the change in revenue. They could, in short, easily reduce those ticket prices to £20 (hell, they could probably give them away for free) and still have enough to make profits like never before. This is merely an attempt to generate positive media attention from those who won't peer too closely at the reality.
It all smacks of a PR stunt to me. All PL clubs will be making such an extortionate amount of money out of TV rights next season that reducing match tickets to a (still-dear, IMHO) £30 is so minimal, their accountants will barely notice the change in revenue. They could, in short, easily reduce those ticket prices to £20 (hell, they could probably give them away for free) and still have enough to make profits like never before. This is merely an attempt to generate positive media attention from those who won't peer too closely at the reality.