That's just one block, the seats there are available at £25 adults and £13 kids, for a first team Premier League game! There are also lots of seats available in almost every other block.
Consistent and incremental ticketing policies and strategies by the club are a significant part of the problem. Denial of the issue is not going to solve it.
Lots of people have identifiable tipping points, where they started to care less, mine was when they sold Real Madrid home semi-final tickets to ANY member, no loyalty points no purchase history. After that, while I still support and am obsessed with the team, I care a lot less about the club. While trying to get tickets for that RM game, queueing online with a few hundred thousand others, JCLs, brand new members, opposition fans, event tourists, despite my years of travelling over to watch Pearce Ball, I felt the love drain and the anger rise. If they don't care, then why should I? Loyalty and trust, when lost, is almost impossible to regain.
I see the club might be reading this Forum, if they were, then they simply weren't listening. Most people on here have City as a disproportionately large part of their life, and we've been screaming for a few years that the Club's beheaviour is "losing the crowd", but that makes you a moaner, or disloyal. We complained because we cared, and we could see what was happening. Passive event tourists (not even City fans) bring a bit more money, but if you allow too many, they kill the thing they come to experience.
I've also followed comments by another member
@give it to gordon, who seems to have had the same deteriorating matchday ticket buying experiences as me. Where it's simply started to become not worth the hassle. It's sad to see us killing the dedictaion of loyal fans like this.
(I know I need to try and move on from the Real Madrid semi-final, stop whining about it, and to heal and forgive,...but I'm not there yet).