Or Shrewsburywe cant lose this game! Be as bad as Halifax, a game I attended.
But I thought we had thousands of fans who have been priced out. I keep reading it on here.This fixture's proving a tough sell, even at £5 for kids. The club will have to give thousands away if they don't want a half empty stadium at this rate.
But I thought we had thousands of fans who have been priced out. I keep reading it on here.
Where the f are they, or do they just want cheap tickets for PL and CL games?
It’s worst than that mate. Posters who’ve been prepared to sell their Grannies for prestigious away fixtures are making their tickets available for the Salford game.But I thought we had thousands of fans who have been priced out. I keep reading it on here.
Where the f are they, or do they just want cheap tickets for PL and CL games?
Or Bury and Bolton in the League CupOr Shrewsbury
Well there is this thing called Christmas on the horizon, an expensive time for many and a lot of people won't have been paid yet for this month.This fixture's proving a tough sell, even at £5 for kids. The club will have to give thousands away if they don't want a half empty stadium at this rate.
Its not a bad cheap Christmas gift that those (especially locals) who can’t afford the premier league tickets could do. Its also on a Saturday.Well there is this thing called Christmas on the horizon, an expensive time for many and a lot of people won't have been paid yet for this month.
The game is a month away, this will sell outBut I thought we had thousands of fans who have been priced out. I keep reading it on here.
Where the f are they, or do they just want cheap tickets for PL and CL games?
Absolute bollocksThis is a game that shows the demand is relatively price inelastic.
The demand for the game is the demand, if it was £30 or £5 for an adult it doesn't make much difference, when comparing it to a £30+ game in the FA Cup recently against a lower league team.Absolute bollocks
The demand is absolutely elastic to price, every time the club lowers the prices for games like this it always sells much better (See Huddersfield last year, and Fulham the year before). This game will hopefully be no different, as its way too early to declare that it hasn't sold out, and once it gets onto general sale I'm sure plenty more will sell.The demand for the game is the demand, if it was £30 or £5 for an adult it doesn't make much difference, when comparing it to a £30+ game in the FA Cup recently against a lower league team.
Just like people splash out £600 for UCL final or £250 for FAC final, the demand for the game has primacy over the price.
I have no idea why you retort to insults?
No one has ever claimed that football pricing isn't relatively inelastic until you now.The demand is absolutely elastic to price, every time the club lowers the prices for games like this it always sells much better (See Huddersfield last year, and Fulham the year before). This game will hopefully be no different, as its way too early to declare that it hasn't sold out, and once it gets onto general sale I'm sure plenty more will sell.
When calcuting how elastic PED is for any good or service, you compare how demand will change when there is a change in price. This has nothing to do with demand for other goods or services.
So the fact that people are willing to pay more for a UCL final than for an FA Cup 3rd round game vs Salford is completely irrelevant. It would be like declaring that Air Travel is price inelastic because people will pay £400 for a flight to New York, but not for a flight to Dublin.
I haven't resorted to insults, your original statement was indeed "absolute bollocks" and that's not an attack on you personally.
But I thought we had thousands of fans who have been priced out. I keep reading it on here.
Where the f are they, or do they just want cheap tickets for PL and CL games?
Really ???You get out of the habit. I've gone from around 12 to 15 games a season. Got 2 games in April and May. I don't feel part of the support anymore, don't see the point of just doing 3 or 4 games.
It's something that is completely dependent on factors such as the income of the consumer.No one has ever claimed that football pricing isn't relatively inelastic until you now.
Ken Bates knew this at Leeds when he doubled the prices. Double the prices lose a third of fans, relatively inelastic, make more money.
I didn't compare the two games, I said each game has its own demand, and change in price is greater than change in demand. RELATIVELY inelastic.
Really ???
Only Everton have a lower income fanbase than us, strange considering Stockport is Gtr Manchester’s wealthiest borough (joke)It's something that is completely dependent on factors such as the income of the consumer.
Due to us having a fairly low income fanbase, we're more likely to have elastic demand than Fulham for example, or Liverpool with tourists for days. If our ticket prices were doubled we'd lose a lot more than a third of our local working class fanbase, and we don’t quite have the tourist element to replace them.
As for this game, it's not £25 for a father and son to attend. It's £60 right now as you need at least one £35 matchday membership to buy a ticket. When it eventually goes onto general sale you'll see how many more people are willing to pay £25 than £60.