The only correct venue they picked was Game 2 in Everton Stadium. Game 1 is in a venue that's too big and Game 3 is in a venue that's too small. I don't understand the logic.Is there a reason why they would’ve chosen Wembley instead of another ground in London that holds 50-60k?
Availability.Is there a reason why they would’ve chosen Wembley instead of another ground in London that holds 50-60k?
Availability.The only correct venue they picked was Game 2 in Everton Stadium. Game 1 is in a venue that's too big and Game 3 is in a venue that's too small. I don't understand the logic.
Well done, for once you've made some common senseI honestly don’t see the downside or negative in doing such a thing.
its looks better on tv and will create a better atmosphere inside the stadium.
also who’s to say that these 10k kids won’t buy a drink or a burger etc once inside the stadium as well.
Is their anyway they could cover that top end with mannequins lol60k is a solid pass for wembley. Sure 30k empty seats won’t look great on telly but thats the problem with a stadium too big for what we needed.
60k, 50k and 20k are great crowds for any int rl series!
Dats cwazyYes but theres only 58k tickets on sale to the general public.
Everything I post makes sense to me.Well done, for once you've made some common sense![]()
Im guessing to open up other bays and sections of the stadium would also mean opening up extra turnstiles and employing more stewards etc at extra cost.Dats cwazy![]()
Whilst this is great news in general and good ammunition to push for a suncorp upgrade, will this be a help or hindrance to bronx crowds next year?Broncos have officially sold level 3 & 5 down to single seats for next year as full season memberships. The sideline is not affordable, so they will need to open level 7 south for full season ticketed memberships. They'd have sold about 32k full season ticketed memberships and we are mid October. Crazy stuff rereally.
Yeah, but the main reason they are selling this way is to fill the bottom stadium bowl and the club wembley middle tier ring.Im guessing to open up other bays and sections of the stadium would also mean opening up extra turnstiles and employing more stewards etc at extra cost.
All true just a little disappointing that they sold the first 30k plus so quickly and have really achieved bugger all after that.If this game gets 60k or more it will beat the record in england (57.5k) and will look good even in a 90k stadium.
I'm glad they're trying to fill the lower bowl first and concentrate the crowd on the upper tier. The mistake they've made at the last few Challenge Cup Finals is opening up too many areas too early, so there is a lot of gaps in the TV arc (for example Warrington v Hull KR this year).Yeah, but the main reason they are selling this way is to fill the bottom stadium bowl and the club wembley middle tier ring.
These two tiers make up about 50k capacity and for most camera angles during the game all you will see is full seats such is the size of Wembley.
If this game gets 60k or more it will beat the record in england (57.5k) and will look good even in a 90k stadium.
It's just how these things work. You get the initial excited rush of sales when it is announced, it then trickles along until closer to the event when marketing and excitement builds again and you get a late surge.All true just a little disappointing that they sold the first 30k plus so quickly and have really achieved bugger all after that.
It's possible to do giveaways without negatively impacting sales. What the RFL has done in the past that has worked against them so much, is they'll push left over good seats at discounted prices a couple weeks out from the match. That understandably annoys people who paid full freight for the same seats or worse, paid a higher price for a worse seat. The behaviour also discourages people from buying early which they're still trying to recover from.Dont want to devalue sales along the way and hurt revenue
Think back to the 2013 WC semi which had 67k and filled the lower bowl first, then the tv arc on the upper tier. That looked great and the only time you saw the empty side of the upper tier was when using the camera at ground level for conversions.I'm glad they're trying to fill the lower bowl first and concentrate the crowd on the upper tier. The mistake they've made at the last few Challenge Cup Finals is opening up too many areas too early, so there is a lot of gaps in the TV arc (for example Warrington v Hull KR this year).
Assuming they haven't been holding back significant areas of tickets from sale, the Test will look better than this, despite this being named as 63,278.
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It was reported on the Pommy forum that about half the ticket sales had London postcodes attached, geez is it too much to hope that they might be sharing that info with the new London Broncos owners.It's possible to do giveaways without negatively impacting sales. What the RFL has done in the past that has worked against them so much, is they'll push left over good seats at discounted prices a couple weeks out from the match. That understandably annoys people who paid full freight for the same seats or worse, paid a higher price for a worse seat. The behaviour also discourages people from buying early which they're still trying to recover from.
That said if they wanted to do a school giveaway, they could very simply limit it just to the worst seats at the venue (ie. the last 10-20 or so rows in the upper stands). That's not going to impact other sales, even if word got out about the giveaway.
Personally, if I was the RFL, I'd be wanting word to get out, and I'd want to spread the offer to as many families as possible in London. I'd want them to give me their contact details, redeem their ticket and would put in incentives to encourage them to upgrade or add-on to their ticket. Wembley was never going to sell out, might as well use the venue you've already paid for as a data collection exercise.
Agreed, giveaways to school kids wouldn't have a negative effect, as opposed to discounting adult tickets at the last minute...which they've done previously and also the NRL GF last year. That has consequences, as you've mentioned.It's possible to do giveaways without negatively impacting sales. What the RFL has done in the past that has worked against them so much, is they'll push left over good seats at discounted prices a couple weeks out from the match. That understandably annoys people who paid full freight for the same seats or worse, paid a higher price for a worse seat. The behaviour also discourages people from buying early which they're still trying to recover from.
That said if they wanted to do a school giveaway, they could very simply limit it just to the worst seats at the venue (ie. the last 10-20 or so rows in the upper stands). That's not going to impact other sales, even if word got out about the giveaway.
Personally, if I was the RFL, I'd be wanting word to get out, and I'd want to spread the offer to as many families as possible in London. I'd want them to give me their contact details, redeem their ticket and would put in incentives to encourage them to upgrade or add-on to their ticket. Wembley was never going to sell out, might as well use the venue you've already paid for as a data collection exercise.
Should have the first test at Tottenham (would of loved the first game to be at Newcastle's St James Park) and 3rd test at Elland Road.The only correct venue they picked was Game 2 in Everton Stadium. Game 1 is in a venue that's too big and Game 3 is in a venue that's too small. I don't understand the logic.
I don’t think the venues you named were available and the NFL has a much bigger profile and reach than RL.Should have the first test at Tottenham (would of loved the first game to be at Newcastle's St James Park) and 3rd test at Elland Road.
Just don't get how NFL can sell out Wembley and TGG can not.