by Skyline »
08 Oct 2007 13:36
Schards#2 Where do you start with as poor a post as that?
Judging by the response, with an even poorer one.
Schards#2 1. No I don't believe there are more people that can make Sundays as opposed to Saturdays which I why I have never suggested that. I suggested there may be some that can only make Sundays and, as we only have 1-2 Sunday home games a season, will go regardless of who the opposition is or whether it's on Sky.
Maybe you should have made that point clear. Where have these people been in previous years when our Sunday attendances have been below our Saturday ones? Or has there been an increase in demand from the Sunday-only folks?
Schards#2 2.We have not continued to sell every ticket
OK, some figures for you. In five home league games, we have had a total attendance of 114,847. Total capacity of those five league games is 121,000. So we've failed to sell 6153 seats, or 5%. I don't have figures for the away attendances to work out how many home seats have been left unfilled, but given those numbers include the Wigan game (who couldn't've brought more than 500-odd) then I'd be surprised if there were more than 4000 seats left in the home ends over those five games.
Schards#2 3. The Led Zep analogy is not a 'straw man argument' it's an explanation of how demand can be higher for one event as opposed to another even though they have the same attendance. something you seem desperate not to acknowledge.
4. I don't ignore any of the arguments, I merely make the point that demand has fallen from last year and, while anyone continues to deny this basic fact, I will continue to make the point.
But, as has been pointed out before, you have no way of knowing what the actual demand has been for tickets. And even if the demand curve has changed meaning people with fewer points are the ones taking up the tickets, doesn't that just mean that the latent demand to watch football is there?
The Led Zep argument is a straw man. If the demand for that was 2,000,000, and the demand for most events is 40,000, do you honestly think that the owners of the O2 would refuse to extend it to 30,000 if they could? It's not about how many people you have to disappoint, it's about how many you can satisfy.
Schards#2 5. The extention is a seperate argument to 4. I am not convinced that last year was not a high water mark for demand and a decision should be made at the end of the year. In view of the lack of sell outs, the club seem to be marketing more and offering special deals, lets see how these go throughout a season rather than making a decision on the basis of last year's demand alone. I would fully accept that the Derby gate is a tick in the plus box as opposed to the ticks in the minus box from the Everton/West Ham games.
How can you say the extension is a seperate argument? This whole thread has been about the extension, with your argument apparently being that we don't need it because of lack of demand.
(On a side note, again, without having the away attendance figures to hand, it is not really possible to say whether a particular game is a 'plus' or a 'minus'.)
Schards#2 If you're going to reply, please try and stick to arguing about the points i've made rather than imaginary ones.
All I have been doing is trying to point out the opposite argument to the points you have raised. I don't need to invent any.