CM Punk wrote:2 stands already sold out for Wigan vs St Helens on Good Friday. Could be a capacity crowd.
Great to see. The exploitation of the fans isn't right though. Paying Premier League prices to watch Super League isn't right. £22 for an 8 year old to watch Wigan is just off the scale. We need to bring a cap in for prices, especially given you can get a season ticket for that stand for £58. Family of 5 weighing in at £120 plus transport, drinks etc is not on. Someone on Twitter posted that you can fly to Majorca and spend a night in a hotel for the same price.
Saddened! wrote:Great to see. The exploitation of the fans isn't right though. Paying Premier League prices to watch Super League isn't right. £22 for an 8 year old to watch Wigan is just off the scale. We need to bring a cap in for prices, especially given you can get a season ticket for that stand for £58. Family of 5 weighing in at £120 plus transport, drinks etc is not on. Someone on Twitter posted that you can fly to Majorca and spend a night in a hotel for the same price.
Joined: Jan 25 2012 Posts: 472 Location: 3 Miles From HQ
Saddened! wrote:Great to see. The exploitation of the fans isn't right though. Paying Premier League prices to watch Super League isn't right.
I've seen a lot of Saints fans complaining about this on Twitter. Surely it is just a case of supply and demand, which means capitalising on profit from a business point of view?
There appears to be a lot of fans that claim to do anything to watch their beloved team, but pay a couple of quid more. Surely it costs more than £5 extra to travel to Hull.
You can't tell everyone that Saints provide a superior product and have a far larger following and then complain that there is a premium price for the high demand tickets. Or are you just defending your title as World Club Champions of whinging?
Leeds_Luke wrote:I've seen a lot of Saints fans complaining about this on Twitter. Surely it is just a case of supply and demand, which means capitalising on profit from a business point of view?
There appears to be a lot of fans that claim to do anything to watch their beloved team, but pay a couple of quid more. Surely it costs more than £5 extra to travel to Hull.
You can't tell everyone that Saints provide a superior product and have a far larger following and then complain that there is a premium price for the high demand tickets. Or are you just defending your title as World Club Champions of whinging?
I completely agree that the club cant be criticised for prices when fans are buying tickets at those prices. The Good Friday derby will be a big money maker at a time when all RL clubs are hardly cash rich. Fans obviously have the choice not to pay but the demand is clearly still there for this particular game and it looks a safe bet to sell out (not a scenario RL finds itself in too often)
The issue comes when the demand is lower for games of lower stature. Having spoken to a director of the club about this - the club is keen to incentivise season ticket and membership purchases as much as possible. IMO though £30 for an adult match ticket and £22 for a child is too high for games and occasions of lesser quality. It doesnt make sense to me that prices are not set according to the stature of game and quality of occasion - finals are more expensive as they are a bigger spectacle and have more significance. I would have thought the same should apply to regular league games - Saints, Warrington, Leeds for example could be Band A matches and thus have higher prices. Prices could also be scaled according to where you are seated within a particular stand - it doesn't make sense to me that a seat on the front row in the corner of the East Stand is priced the same as mid way up the central block.
Joined: Jan 25 2012 Posts: 472 Location: 3 Miles From HQ
MadDogg wrote:Prices could also be scaled according to where you are seated within a particular stand - it doesn't make sense to me that a seat on the front row in the corner of the East Stand is priced the same as mid way up the central block.
That's exactly the situation here. The lower priced tickets (behind the posts) have all been sold, and only the more expensive seats are left. Which are the ones everyone is complaining about, even though the prices haven't increased since going on sale.
If they wanted the cheap seats, they should have bought them before they sold out, imo.
MadDogg wrote:I completely agree that the club cant be criticised for prices when fans are buying tickets at those prices. The Good Friday derby will be a big money maker at a time when all RL clubs are hardly cash rich. Fans obviously have the choice not to pay but the demand is clearly still there for this particular game and it looks a safe bet to sell out (not a scenario RL finds itself in too often)
The issue comes when the demand is lower for games of lower stature. Having spoken to a director of the club about this - the club is keen to incentivise season ticket and membership purchases as much as possible. IMO though £30 for an adult match ticket and £22 for a child is too high for games and occasions of lesser quality. It doesnt make sense to me that prices are not set according to the stature of game and quality of occasion - finals are more expensive as they are a bigger spectacle and have more significance. I would have thought the same should apply to regular league games - Saints, Warrington, Leeds for example could be Band A matches and thus have higher prices. Prices could also be scaled according to where you are seated within a particular stand - it doesn't make sense to me that a seat on the front row in the corner of the East Stand is priced the same as mid way up the central block.
Good points. It's fine to charge high prices if the demand is constantly there. But the knock on effect of this pricing is that both clubs will likely see a reduction in ticket sales for the next game. If you're a family spending £120+ on tickets for the derby, are you going to the next game, or missing that? A lot of people will be the ones who don't get season tickets as they can't afford them or can't make enough games to make them worth it. If the prices were more reasonable they'd go to more games, which in turn drives more season tickets if things go well. If Wigan have done the maths and are confident that extracting so much for one game is workable then that's one thing, but in an age where Premier League clubs are capping away prices, paying more for RL does seem odd. The big crowd will be great for Wigan, but it's also contributing to the games where three of the four stands are largely empty and the club announces a suspicious 10,000 gate which sets off a tidal wave of Latics fans laughing at them.
Joined: Jan 20 2013 Posts: 4470 Location: Watching Rugby League
Saddened! wrote:The big crowd will be great for Wigan, but it's also contributing to the games where three of the four stands are largely empty and the club announces a suspicious 10,000 gate which sets off a tidal wave of Latics fans laughing at them.
If they announce a 10k crowd then they've sold 10k seats. Same as every other sports club in the country.
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