Bournemouth Blue
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 21 Mar 2015
- Messages
- 2,125
This is just a thought, I live on the south coast now, although I have been a City fan since childhood, and visited Maine Road many times and the Etihad a few times before it became beyond my means to travel to Manchester, buy a ticket, and get home again, as most kick off times mean a hotel room for a night too. Anyway, my point is, if City really care about their growing fan base and future blues, will they allocate at least a proportion of the additional capacity to parents with children who have no experience of watching live Premier League football? I mean sell a few hundred discounted tickets to people who have never been before as long as they bring children, and give them a chance to build up loyalty points so they can become regulars?
I have two enthusiastic footballing grandkids who live near AFC Bournemouth’s ground, they have managed to go a couple of times each to friendlies, League cup or by invitation because of their team’s support from the club, but the only way they can get to see Premier League games is by their parents shelling out for expensive hospitality deals. OK the ground is tiny, but how will they build their fan base if only the existing season ticket holders and regular fans can get in? It is probably the same at City, I haven’t seen a Premier League game in ten years, but surely the big clubs could do more to let low or middle income families get the experience, and encourage regular attendance
I have two enthusiastic footballing grandkids who live near AFC Bournemouth’s ground, they have managed to go a couple of times each to friendlies, League cup or by invitation because of their team’s support from the club, but the only way they can get to see Premier League games is by their parents shelling out for expensive hospitality deals. OK the ground is tiny, but how will they build their fan base if only the existing season ticket holders and regular fans can get in? It is probably the same at City, I haven’t seen a Premier League game in ten years, but surely the big clubs could do more to let low or middle income families get the experience, and encourage regular attendance
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