Priced out? | Club announce that matchday tickets being reduced by up to 43% (p93)

Kids dont really go anywhere with their mates anymore.

Could be another factor couldn't it? Football seems to be going along cheerily not giving a toss about getting them back, it's going to end badly.

As a teenager watching the football I don't think I would have been as interested if I would have been surrounded just by people my parents age and older.
 
Could be another factor couldn't it? Football seems to be going along cheerily not giving a toss about getting them back, it's going to end badly.

As a teenager watching the football I don't think I would have been as interested if I would have been surrounded just by people my parents age and older.
Could be a factor but I'm not agreeing there's an issue. Football will carry on being popular as long as the product is good. If crowds dip then prices will follow suit.
 
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Could be a factor but I'm not agreeing there's an issue. Football will carry on being popular as long as the product is good. If crowds dip then prices will follow suit.


IMHO when the older fans get a lot older football will end up being everyone's second sport, if youngsters aren't involved now the plug can't and wont be plugged by tourists forever.
 
City have never had regular crowds as big in their history. Didn't every league game have an attendance of over 50k last season?
Pretty much every league game is sold out bar the occasional re-arranged midweek game. Starting from next season, we'll have our highest ever average attendance when the new stand opens.
 
There are conflicting figures but the main metric is anecdotal in as much what you can see with your own eyes. There are very few teenage fans going together with their mates (There are some) but this isn't going to build the next generation of blues.

If Chelsea's average age is 59 we wont be far shy of that number in a few years time.

If you're old enough you can remember cinemas being ramped to the gills on a Saturday, people could never have envisioned their demise but it happened.
I don't disagree that football is currently at its zenith, and expect the heading ban will drive it indoors in the next 50 years. I know they are big on Basketball in Barcelona but always thought indoor football could emerge as a force eventually and ideally for the Tiktokers who want a goal every minute.

There average age is about 41 in the uk, the oldest and youngest won't go to the football,and carry ins don't count towards the data. I reckon the ST age average is older than the crowd as a whole, a but under 18s, but probably not

I went to a beer festival the other week and was the youngest person there until 6.30pm, but it was similar 15 years earlier, and everyone had got 15 years' older. Pubs are not too dissimilar, and bookies would all close if it wasn't for the gaming machines and gangsters laundering cash.

We saw football dead on its arse in the 1980s but the 1990 world cup got it fashionable again, followed the media push from 1992 with Sky, and now it is as popular as ever at all levels, and foolish to expect it will never change.
 
There are conflicting figures but the main metric is anecdotal in as much what you can see with your own eyes. There are very few teenage fans going together with their mates (There are some) but this isn't going to build the next generation of blues.

If Chelsea's average age is 59 we wont be far shy of that number in a few years time.

If you're old enough you can remember cinemas being ramped to the gills on a Saturday, people could never have envisioned their demise but it happened.
Yes but it happened because people and their habits changed more than anything cinemas did. I don’t dispute there are things football and City can do better, but you also need to take into account one of those is providing and accepting young people have changed their habits and behaviour.
For example my son has been going to City since he was 8, we go together now he’s 24 about 7/8 times a season he goes a couple more times with none City supporting freinds. He’d has no intention though of wanting a season ticket and going every week whatever City do because he has lots of other interests most of which cost more than football.He has loads of friends most have no interest in football or if they do support other teams. Yes he also takes a few pictures on his phone and instagrams, because that’s what his generation do. Very different to me when I was in my teens and 20s and had season tickets because it’s different times, not worse just different.
 
Pretty much every league game is sold out bar the occasional re-arranged midweek game. Starting from next season, we'll have our highest ever average attendance when the new stand opens.


That isn't the point, the point is is that those fans could easily move to another team if that team becomes successful.

If some fans are happy that this sport has become a day out rather than a passion then that further compounds the issue. It's OK now so we don't have to worry really isn't forward thinking.

We ain't seeing that new stand out any day soon other than on the really big matches either.
 
I don't disagree that football is currently at its zenith, and expect the heading ban will drive it indoors in the next 50 years. I know they are big on Basketball in Barcelona but always thought indoor football could emerge as a force eventually and ideally for the Tiktokers who want a goal every minute.

There average age is about 41 in the uk, the oldest and youngest won't go to the football,and carry ins don't count towards the data. I reckon the ST age average is older than the crowd as a whole, a but under 18s, but probably not

I went to a beer festival the other week and was the youngest person there until 6.30pm, but it was similar 15 years earlier, and everyone had got 15 years' older. Pubs are not too dissimilar, and bookies would all close if it wasn't for the gaming machines and gangsters laundering cash.

We saw football dead on its arse in the 1980s but the 1990 world cup got it fashionable again, followed the media push from 1992 with Sky, and now it is as popular as ever at all levels, and foolish to expect it will never change.

Absolutely.

I walked through the Northern Quarter last week on a Sunday afternoon and it was tanked with middle aged people, not a sign of young teenagers really.

The only way football is going to recover from this is to include young local people.
 
Pretty much every league game is sold out bar the occasional re-arranged midweek game. Starting from next season, we'll have our highest ever average attendance when the new stand opens.
City shouldn't take the fanbase for granted but these really are unprecedented times for the club. I remember when the Commonwealth games stadium was being built someone told me it was going to be 65k stadium when City moved in. I thought there was noway we'd fill that.
 
There will be thousands more flexi golds next season to encourage younger families / fans into the ground and expanded North Stand. Now that flexis have been improved, not perfect I know, they are currently our best hope of getting a younger and possibly more local fanbase.

BTW, the atmosphere disappeared at most fixtures well before the regular appearance of half and half scarves etc.
 
That isn't the point, the point is is that those fans could easily move to another team if that team becomes successful.

If some fans are happy that this sport has become a day out rather than a passion then that further compounds the issue. It's OK now so we don't have to worry really isn't forward thinking.

We ain't seeing that new stand out any day soon other than on the really big matches either.
There will be circa 8,000 new seats to fill next season compared to this seasons restricted capacity but the club will have plans in hand. I'm quietly confident.
 
Absolutely.

I walked through the Northern Quarter last week on a Sunday afternoon and it was tanked with middle aged people, not a sign of young teenagers really.

The only way football is going to recover from this is to include young local people.
I think you're either seeing a problem that isn't there or you're ahead of the curve. Glass half empty?
 
There will be circa 8,000 new seats to fill next season compared to this seasons restricted capacity but the club will have plans in hand. I'm quietly confident.


I hope you're right but I see impending doom. If that age demographic doesn't change then football is fucked in this country and if the money moves from this country to another country then we are doubly fucked.

I kid you not they are going to have to nearly give those 8000 seats away to shift them.
 
There will be circa 8,000 new seats to fill next season compared to this seasons restricted capacity but the club will have plans in hand. I'm quietly confident.
I am intrigued at how the club intend to fill it, big games won’t be a problem. That said if some weeks there are 1 or 2000 seats around the ground not filled that’s no bad thing means everyone that wants a ticket sat together probably has one and there is room to grow,maybe keep prices down. A sold out stadium every week isn’t ideal for Matchday fans.
 
I think you're either seeing a problem that isn't there or you're ahead of the curve. Glass half empty?


Not really I am just a realist, remove the young fans then you have nobody following behind. When the club shop mob fuck off all that'll be left is a stain.
 
I am intrigued at how the club intend to fill it, big games won’t be a problem. That said if some weeks there are 1 or 2000 seats around the ground not filled that’s no bad thing means everyone that wants a ticket sat together probably has one and there is room to grow,maybe keep prices down. A sold out stadium every week isn’t ideal for Matchday fans.

They wont fill it, unless they reduce the prices massively and remove ticket limitations.
 
I think the entire model needs to (and will) change. Fairly pricey Season tickets (worldwide) for viewing every game at home with other exclusive content - an extension of clubs existing fan channels.
Stadium attendance then becoming the cheap option -subsidised or even free food, drink, parking and even accommodation.
 
Could be another factor couldn't it? Football seems to be going along cheerily not giving a toss about getting them back, it's going to end badly.

As a teenager watching the football I don't think I would have been as interested if I would have been surrounded just by people my parents age and older.
We’ve really not looked after the younger generation thus the future generation in the last decade or so at City and across many (but not all) clubs across the country.

We moved everyone out of the North Stand to create a Family Stand, which was probably the biggest Family Stand in the country (in a lot of grounds the Family Stand is just a couple of blocks, but at the Etihad it’s twice the size of our Singing Section), yet we kept banging prices up and pricing kids out of this huge stand.

Some of the pricing for children at City has been ridiculous. Last season, maybe ⅓ of PL games were £48 for children and prices had been silly for years, when it’s been £9 for children in every stand for every PL game at Liverpool for years and until this season it was £13 for children in most areas for every PL game at United (but it’s now much more aligned to ours… Berrada?)

City have dropped prices this season but wouldn’t have done without our protests. And years of kids being priced out will have seen them take up different hobbies and interests than attending expensive football matches.

For a long time City (and Everton) have had very old supports. With large numbers of fans having been ST holders for decades. But as the decades pass by, we all get older, more frail, unwell or die. So who’s taking our place?

The PL clubs are riding on the crest of a wave at the moment and have the tourists attendees in their thousands across most grounds. But we saw what happened to Italian football and should know nothing lasts forever. If we take a nose dive (and that’s not implausible with the way the PL is being run into the ground by fucking idiots like Masters) we could easily see what happened to Serie A happen to the PL and have half empty statiums every week as all the tourists fuck off to the Bundesliga and the ticket tout agencies can’t shift tickets for love nor money for PL games come 2035, and there are far too few local fans attending games to make up for it, even with cheaper tickets because they were forgotten about by clubs.

I posted this earlier in this thread:

Yep, doesn’t matter who anyone supports when it comes to this. Fans have to take a stand and do it together as one before it’s too late.

English football is going to implode soon. It’ll be like Serie A from the late 90s and 00s where ticket prices went through the roof and fans just stopped going.

Juventus used to get about 25,000 in their old Stadio Delle Alpi which held 70,000. There was a Turin derby in that stadium that had an attendance of just 19,000 in 2003… and Juve got to the CL final that season. That stadium was only built in 1990 and ended up being knocked down in 2009. It was newer than the Etihad is now when it was demolished.

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Even the two best supported clubs: Inter and Milan; struggled with 36,000ish average attendances in their 80,000 San Siro at times in the mid 2010s.

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Roma v Sampdoria in 2014:
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Clubs priced out their fans, fans stopped going, huge stadiums were empty, TV companies stopped buying their TV rights and the clubs were skint. Only 2 Italian teams have won the CL since 2003, and none in the last 14 years.

It’s slowly starting to get better in Serie A now. The Milan clubs are back getting 72,000 average attendances. It’s probably the second best quality league in Europe behind the PL now. But it had two decades where it ate itself and was in a terrible mess for what was once the greatest league in the world that everyone wanted to watch.

Yet even now they are showing they haven’t learnt their lesson: look at the attendance between Milan and Liverpool earlier this season in the CL: 58,000, 22,000 empty seats when their Serie A attendances are over 70,000… all because they tried to cash-in. Tickets were said to start at €125 for home fans. That’s half a season ticket in the Bundesliga, just for one CL game.
The Serie A warning is there.

We have a new stand to fill next season but we should be targeting local and proper City fans to fill it. Existing ST holders with a good price initiative to move there to make a racket, lapsed ST holders and existing non-ST membership fans, initiatives like Liverpool have around fans with an ‘L’ postcode to target fans with an ‘M’ postcode or ‘0161’ area code, initiatives like Liverpool have to get kids in really cheap.

I don’t think we should be aiming for the tourist market for this stand, especially when they’ll be paying a lot of money yet only getting a shit behind-the-goal view when they’d probably be expecting the much better side-stand views for the money they’ll be paying. But with the utter lack of a push by the club to market this stand as a stand for vocal City fans, I can’t see it (especially with the hotel joined onto it) being anything other than a tourists stand.

And I think that’s a dangerous and short-sighted short-term pound-sign game to play.

We’ve already seen this season chunks of seats at the top of the Colin Bell Stand that the ticket tout sites have failed to shift. There were noticeably chunks of empty seats in the corner of the North Stand and East Stand against Burnley. That’s just after one year of not winning trophy. What happens if it’s ten? or if the PL does nose dive?

People often ignore this sort of thing when the team is winning and often think that sell out games show that it’s not a problem, but it is because there’s a long-term issue at play in the background that clubs aren’t paying attention to (maybe they don’t care because they’ll just retire or get another job when the shit hits the fan so won’t be arsed?).

The drop in prices of match tickets and price freeze of STs is a start, but there needs to be a full long-term initiative that fans are involved in around ticketing to ensure we can combat any future difficult times for the club or league.
 
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