Eric the Red
Team HuskerBoard
MU fans hope Huskers are shut out of tickets
By MIKE DEARMOND
T hat sea of red that has so often washed over Memorial Stadium when Nebraska plays a football game at Missouri may only be a relative puddle this year.
“For the first time in my life,” said Joe DeSimone, a gleeful Missouri fan from Lee’s Summit, “I think there are going to be fewer than 15,000 Nebraska fans at Faurot Field.”
Try no more than 8,000 according to some estimates for an Oct. 6 game that is — except for a few tickets being held back for Tiger Scholarship Fund and new season ticket holders — a sellout.
And according to DeSimone, Nebraska fans have only a few of their own number to blame.
Last week, some Nebraska fans flooded a Missouri internet Web site with messages. That ticked off DeSimone, a frequent poster on message boards.
“These arrogant Nebraska fans,” DeSimone said, “they think they’re so entitled to be great because they were once great.”
And so he personally mounted a campaign to help sell tickets to Missouri fans and to promote more MU fans to buy multiple tickets by joining the Tiger Scholarship Fund.
On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the MU ticket office and the TSF office were flooded by MU fans answering DeSimone’s call.
Just how many Cornhusker fans will eventually make it into Memorial Stadium on Oct. 6 is hard to pin down.
MU guaranteed a ticket allotment to Nebraska of only 3,850 tickets. Those have all been sold. At 5 p.m. Friday, 4,000 tickets went on sale via the internet, and DeSimone said he had been told that more than half of those tickets — all gone now — went to MU fans.
MU’s ticket office and the TSF fund are holding around 10,000 single-game tickets for late-buying season-ticket or TSF donors. Of that number, MU officials say that 7,000 would be for seating on the grass on the hill behind the north goal posts or in temporary bleachers on the North concourse.
Anticipating that most of those remaining seats are sold to MU fans, DeSimone positively cackles over the possibility that a game seen as key to winning the Big 12 North could possibly have 62,000 out of a projected 70,000 screaming for the Tigers and against the Cornhuskers.
Season-ticket rush
Vince Volpe, head of the TSF, told The Star that as of now, Missouri has sold “just a hair under 28,000 season tickets.
“And you’ll get 6,000 to 7,000, maybe even 8,000 more, once the students come back and get their tickets and the student sports passes,” Volpe said.
That would give MU a school-record season-ticket total of between 34,000 and 36,000 for the upcoming season.
By MIKE DEARMOND
T hat sea of red that has so often washed over Memorial Stadium when Nebraska plays a football game at Missouri may only be a relative puddle this year.
“For the first time in my life,” said Joe DeSimone, a gleeful Missouri fan from Lee’s Summit, “I think there are going to be fewer than 15,000 Nebraska fans at Faurot Field.”
Try no more than 8,000 according to some estimates for an Oct. 6 game that is — except for a few tickets being held back for Tiger Scholarship Fund and new season ticket holders — a sellout.
And according to DeSimone, Nebraska fans have only a few of their own number to blame.
Last week, some Nebraska fans flooded a Missouri internet Web site with messages. That ticked off DeSimone, a frequent poster on message boards.
“These arrogant Nebraska fans,” DeSimone said, “they think they’re so entitled to be great because they were once great.”
And so he personally mounted a campaign to help sell tickets to Missouri fans and to promote more MU fans to buy multiple tickets by joining the Tiger Scholarship Fund.
On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the MU ticket office and the TSF office were flooded by MU fans answering DeSimone’s call.
Just how many Cornhusker fans will eventually make it into Memorial Stadium on Oct. 6 is hard to pin down.
MU guaranteed a ticket allotment to Nebraska of only 3,850 tickets. Those have all been sold. At 5 p.m. Friday, 4,000 tickets went on sale via the internet, and DeSimone said he had been told that more than half of those tickets — all gone now — went to MU fans.
MU’s ticket office and the TSF fund are holding around 10,000 single-game tickets for late-buying season-ticket or TSF donors. Of that number, MU officials say that 7,000 would be for seating on the grass on the hill behind the north goal posts or in temporary bleachers on the North concourse.
Anticipating that most of those remaining seats are sold to MU fans, DeSimone positively cackles over the possibility that a game seen as key to winning the Big 12 North could possibly have 62,000 out of a projected 70,000 screaming for the Tigers and against the Cornhuskers.
Season-ticket rush
Vince Volpe, head of the TSF, told The Star that as of now, Missouri has sold “just a hair under 28,000 season tickets.
“And you’ll get 6,000 to 7,000, maybe even 8,000 more, once the students come back and get their tickets and the student sports passes,” Volpe said.
That would give MU a school-record season-ticket total of between 34,000 and 36,000 for the upcoming season.