I'm kinda worried about it when the east stadium project is completed. Almost 100,000 seats?
Yeah, I think its the same at Oregon, that would suck!I'm kinda worried about it when the east stadium project is completed. Almost 100,000 seats?
I wouldn't worry about that. Ohio State has no issues selling tickets once the students get around. The reason we don't have a sellout streak is that there are 2-3 games before students show up to school. When you lose a 55,000 potential ticket base, it makes an effect.
It was not just you - there were a TON. And they were making a bit of noise for about the first quarter. After that.... not so much.Was it just me, or did there seem to be a lot of Hawk fans at the game today?
NOTHING being done by UNL to sell tickets is not done by every other major, and most minor, universities.I'm still waiting to hear from a poster or two that was convinced the streak was over but never explained themselves.
I just wonder how far you can stretch this before it becomes meaningless. Let's say we are crappy in a couple years and there are 5000 seats we need to sell the day before a game. Is there anything stopping the University from lowering the price to $1 per ticket and selling them to a big donor or business sponsor?
No. You cannot inherit tickets, and you cannot sell or transfer your season tickets...(not if the university finds out about it)Singe said:NU season tickets are handed down generation to generation. Seacon tickets are not something that are easily obtained.
NO.But... if somebody wasn't in their seat, doesn't that mean the sellout streak is over?Every seat in the stadium is a season ticket so as long as they sell out the first game the rest of the year is a sellout, same as most big stadiums.