As long as there is a waiting list over 20K for season tickets and you have 18K students via each week for 12K seats, the price of the entertainment will continue to rise. Every year, expect an increase... Player payouts will increase at a higher percentage than 4% each year. got get that money to keep up..
check this out... see what it cost to see those competing every year for CFP spots
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Will you be happy when we lose our home field/court advantage because all the people who made noise get priced out?I'm not defensive at all about it or other prices in my life rising. I recall cutting yards as a very young kid and being upset when gas went over a quarter a gallon. I understand prices going up is annoying and have for many decades.
Prices rise. Entertainment prices almost always rise when the product is good and SEC football is among the best in the country and UT is a rising program in the SEC. I expect prices to rise as demand increases for a good product.
If the SEC begins to suck and no one wants tickets and prices DO drop, will you be happier because they dropped? I'm thankful we have a program worth watching.
We won't lose the noise. I've not been to Neyland in awhile because my legs aren't up to it but the times I've gone over the years, it's been as noisy as ever every game. I loved going to Stokely back in the day and it was often incredibly loud as has been Thompson-Boling when I was last there.Will you be happy when we lose our home field/court advantage because all the people who made noise get priced out?
I’d rather be the best in a weaker SEC than an also ran in an elite SEC, yes.
Yeah it says I’d rather see my favorite football team win than lose and that I’d rather see teams like Alabama and Georgia suck than be good. If that is an indictment on someone as a fan or as a person, I’ll plea guilty to that.We won't lose the noise. I've not been to Neyland in awhile because my legs aren't up to it but the times I've gone over the years, it's been as noisy as ever every game. I loved going to Stokely back in the day and it was often incredibly loud as has been Thompson-Boling when I was last there.
It's not been the same people for all those years and I'm not there anymore but the noise is still there.
As for the SEC, that you would like winning against losers more than you would like being competitive against the best says a lot about you as a person.
I'd rather beat Bama and GA when they're elite than when they aren't.Yeah it says I’d rather see my favorite football team win than lose and that I’d rather see teams like Alabama and Georgia suck than be good. If that is an indictment on someone as a fan or as a person, I’ll plea guilty to that.
I’d like to see the Vols beat the AFC Pro Bowl roster, but realistically I understand that’s not going to happen. This is a zero sum game, and a strong Alabama and Georgia are not a good thing for Tennessee. I don’t think Clemson ever complained that FSU and Miami weren’t trotting Peter Warrick and Michael Irvin out there when the Tigers were winning championships. And beating Jim Donnan and Mike Dubose in 1998 didn’t cheapen the national championship for me a bit.I'd rather beat Bama and GA when they're elite than when they aren't.
Unlike you, I'm not satisfied by hollow victories over non elite opponents. LOTS of teams can beat bad teams. Great teams beat good teams.
If you can beat bad teams, you're one of many.
If you can beat good teams, you're in the running to be the best.
I get it. You don't actually want to be elite or believe we can be elite, you'd rather beat GA and Bama when they are down.I’d like to see the Vols beat the AFC Pro Bowl roster, but realistically I understand that’s not going to happen. This is a zero sum game, and a strong Alabama and Georgia are not a good thing for Tennessee. I don’t think Clemson ever complained that FSU and Miami weren’t trotting Peter Warrick and Michael Irvin out there when the Tigers were winning championships. And beating Jim Donnan and Mike Dubose in 1998 didn’t cheapen the national championship for me a bit.
I think you’re viewing this to simplistic. No one is saying tickets should never go up, but it’s almost as if you work in the ticket office. No need to explain supply and demand, I can assure you most here get it. The price gouging doesn’t match the results is all I’m saying.I'm not defensive at all about it or other prices in my life rising. I recall cutting yards as a very young kid and being upset when gas went over a quarter a gallon. I understand prices going up is annoying and have for many decades.
Prices rise. Entertainment prices almost always rise when the product is good and SEC football is among the best in the country and UT is a rising program in the SEC. I expect prices to rise as demand increases for a good product.
If the SEC begins to suck and no one wants tickets and prices DO drop, will you be happier because they dropped? I'm thankful we have a program worth watching.
Well, I’ll believe Tennessee can be elite again when I see it and not a single second before, but I will root for Alabama, Florida, and Georgia to suck regardless of how good Tennessee is or even if we don’t play them. But a single shred of logic tells you that what’s bad for Alabama, Florida, and Georgia is good for Tennessee. I imagine if you were tasked with invading Russia, you’d insist on starting Christmas Day.I get it. You don't actually want to be elite or believe we can be elite, you'd rather beat GA and Bama when they are down.
That's the difference between us. I believe the Vols can be elite enough to play anyone at their best and not have to hope others are weak so we can win.
This pretty much covers it, and it is crazy to me that anyone would dispute a word you said here.I think you’re viewing this to simplistic. No one is saying tickets should never go up, but it’s almost as if you work in the ticket office. No need to explain supply and demand, I can assure you most here get it. The price gouging doesn’t match the results is all I’m saying.
Someone posted avg ticket prices and we fell I believe in the top 4. Seems a bit silly to me. We fell right there with bama who won how many nattys in the last 15 years? When’s the last time we even sniffed a SEC championship and had a true shot at it? I’m sure you’ll come back with “we just made the playoffs”. Let’s be real here. I love Tn as much as anyone here but we were a top 8-12 team. We couldn’t touch the talent of the top few teams, but we are paying the top few team prices.
Tn athletics in general are up right now and white is taking advantage. It’s to be expected. But the ticket hikes sure don’t match the output in some instances. That’s all I’m saying. They’ll fill the stands with or without me. I get it.
Apparently I do have to explain supply and demand.I think you’re viewing this to simplistic. No one is saying tickets should never go up, but it’s almost as if you work in the ticket office. No need to explain supply and demand, I can assure you most here get it. The price gouging doesn’t match the results is all I’m saying.
Someone posted avg ticket prices and we fell I believe in the top 4. Seems a bit silly to me. We fell right there with bama who won how many nattys in the last 15 years? When’s the last time we even sniffed a SEC championship and had a true shot at it? I’m sure you’ll come back with “we just made the playoffs”. Let’s be real here. I love Tn as much as anyone here but we were a top 8-12 team. We couldn’t touch the talent of the top few teams, but we are paying the top few team prices.
Tn athletics in general are up right now and white is taking advantage. It’s to be expected. But the ticket hikes sure don’t match the output in some instances. That’s all I’m saying. They’ll fill the stands with or without me. I get it.
You don't have to go back to the 1900s, that's an exaggeration.
A Tennessee football ticket cost, what, about 20-50 dollars in the early 1990s, at least regular folks seats? I think? That's 50-100 dollars in today's money, give or take a bit. And I don't remember what the donation costs were back then. Someone can chime in if they know. But I'm definitely willing to bet it wasn't anywhere on the scale of prices now.
I may be wrong on the pricing particulars, I concede, as I don't have a clear recollection of pricing past a certain year. But the trend is still glaring. Are they free to monetize in this way? Sure. But the acceleration of aggressive pricing and pricing out folks to suit their new model of college athletics is still noticeable and worth commenting on.
My first game was in 1990. Father purchased the tickets at face value from a friend and, I think, IIRC they were $22. Now, that was way up in the upper deck too. As a 16 year old kid, I remember thinking that was a lot of money!That $50 cost from 1990 would be almost $125 today.
If you invested that $50 in the S&P500, that $50 would be almost $2,000 today.
Food for thought
Lucky to have 75k actually in the stadium at times less than 10 years ago says different when we are losingApparently I do have to explain supply and demand.
There's a 20,000+ waiting list for tickets so they are in demand. A sports product that is in heavy demand, whether that product is winning or not, is still a valuable product and commands a premium ticket price.
It really is that simple.
When the Stones tour, despite being actual 80yo sloppy playing musicians, they make millions of dollars. Not because they're good musicians, really, but because they are the Stones and no one else is. LOTS of people want to see them whether they are good or not in concert.
When the Vols play, despite not having won an SEC Title or Natty in years, they command high ticket prices. Not because they are the best team in the sport but because they are the Vols and no one else is. LOTS of people want to see them whether they are winning it all or not.
It really is that simple.
