So we should be proud that like 15,000 people got stuck with tickets they couldn't move and a team they didn't want to watch?
Also UNK (thats Kearney for you folks East of the capitol)
Is completely cutting mens baseball, golf and tennis because of a 3.4 mill budget shortfall, affecting the lives of about 60 young athletes. That baseball team did annual fundraisers and put a lot into their community. And it stinks that they have to go through this when we are paying failed coaches millions of dollars.
i don't understand the intense need some have to dispute the sellout streak. our tickets were sold so it's sold out....nuff said.
MSU game was mostly full at kickoff. After half, it cleared out some.I know there was some discussion on this board after the MSU game about the student section being empty at the upper levels when it was shown on TV, but the announcers also frequently commented on how loud the stadium was that day. For any of you who were there, do these numbers compute? Was it really only 2/3 full? Same with the Illinois and BCU games? A few no-shows is one thing, but 30k empty seats for a game seems hard to imagine.
The attendance figures posted for the game is made up of these: tickets sold (so that's 85K right there), concession workers, security/police, credentialed media (which can increase with bigger games), players, people with sideline passes, and a few other categories I can't think of right now.On my ESPN app, when I go to the Gamecast tab on each of these games, it shows the following in terms of attendance, with a listed stadium capacity of 85,458:
CU: 89,853
Troy: 89,360
Purdue: 88,911
Minnesota: 89,272
BCU: 88,735
Illinois: 88,316
MSU: 88,793
I know some of ESPN's info is dubious, but where do these numbers come from, and why would there be such a disparity between these attendance figures and the actual tickets scanned?