Sebastabear said:
TheFiatLux said:
Also, Cal needs to think out of the box on how to get students there, and of course preferably early.
I had offered a few years ago to fund this experiment. Have a threshold driven lottery for each game. Every game 5,000 students show up, 2 students (randomly) will win $1,000.
Why do it like that? because then that encourages students to get their friends to go since if you don't hit the 5,000 student threshold no one has a chance of winning. YOu'd have to publicize this, explain it a little, but we're smart people.
And I firmly believe once word gets out about the first couple $1,000 winners - JUST FOR SHOWING UP - it would generate excitement.
Even is this isn't the answer, at least be thinking about DIFFERENT ways to do thing.
And I'm still 100% willing to fund this. Sebast - you can match me and we can make it 5 students win each game or something like that. I'm down to meet with our development person, but they got to let us design so they don't f it up. But then again, I haven't got my college degree yet so not sure how qualified i am to offer ideas....
Fiat as a guy with his finger on the pulse of what the undergrads are thinking, what do you think the best approach is here? Is it having a drawing as you suggest, having the first couple thousand students get in free, or creating a fund to subsidize the tickets and take the price down from $105 to $50, for example? I think any of these could work, but I imagine some of them will have a harder time getting through the administration than others. I think that last one may be the most palatable and honestly easiest to implement .
Thanks Sebastabear. From everything I hear, cost of a season ticket does not seem to be a factor in students' decision to not purchase tickets. Especially with the combo football / hoops package where it's basically $5 a game, that is simply not an issue. I never hear from my classmates or fellow students this being a reason. I do HEAR this tho - if they don't buy season tickets then the cost of an individual game is sky high (as in $40-$50 - that IS A LOT to a student). I get wanting to incentivize students to buy season tickets but that should not come vis-a-vis de-incentivizing them to buy tickets later should they have not done that. This isn't rocket science, we should be able to figure this balance out. But i believe making student tickets free or creating a fund to cover them is a solution that doesn't address the actual problem. So a lose / lose really.
The # 1 thing I hear from students is, particulary for night games, they have other things to do that night. And there is good reason for this. Many belong to fraternities, sororoities, social clubs, student groups etc. Most of these plan events on Saturday nights. Given the choice between going to a football game and one of these events students will quite understandably choose the events because these are organizations to which they belong and for which they have a stronger affinity. This is where the deletrious impact of TV with the random night games comes into play (just as it does for alumni and general community members). The students will go to night games IF they don't conflict with their events. But since these events are planned well in advance, the night games need to be done the same. If not, with the option of TV, they can go to the event and have the game playing on TV in the background should they so desire. On the west coast we simply do not have the same culture as the south or midwest.
Additionally, and I don't have the #s on this, I think many more students work today to cover their school bills (or parts of it). Hey, I do!!! :-) While they might not be working on the weekend, if they work during the week, that means the weekend is when they have to study. Honestly, I hear this from a lot of students. Also, students today are sooooo much more stressed about their grades. I can speak from experience on this. Back in the 80s and 90s yeah, everyone wanted to get good grades, but getting a B, hell getting a C (hell, Ds earn degress!!) wasn't the end of the world. Now it seems like it is. One of the reasons I think the universe has me back at Cal right now is to let my classmates know it's going to be OK... they can chill.. life works out (they do NOT get that at all). I hear from so many of them how much they appreciate it. But i don't think replicating Ken is a good strategy (scary actually) so that's not a long term solution.
So here is what I think (among other things):
- We simply have to make going to the games part of the student communal experience. The suggestion above about groups, Haas students, professors, etc, is wonderful. In order to do that we need to work with the student group on understanding their schedules, agendas and what not. Maybe one answer is incenting them to move normal social events to Friday night instead of Saturday night.
- We need to reach out to non-traditional targets to get them excited. International students, transfers, etc. Cal (the university not the athletic department) did a great job on this a couple of years ago when they hosted all international students to a special pre-season clinic hosted by Jared Goff and others to teach them American football. It was a brilliant idea. So of course we haven't done it since... But even earlier this year, once again, the University did that great world record human letter C thing in Memorial Stadium. GREAT idea. More of that.
- We do this in corporate America, but we need to almost bribe students. That is the idea of the threshold lottery. In a normal, set-prize, lottery you want fewer people involved because it increases your odds. But tying it to attendance threshold ensures people get other people to go and you can win. It does't have to be 5K, you can start with 3K (which would ensure the main section is full at teh very least) or 4K or whatever... but students understanding that hey if we can get others there we may win $1K (or more, whatever we decide) i think would be very effective.
Finally, and this is something different, pride and shame go hand in hand. On the same side, I think we need to start insisting that attendance #s are ACTUAL attendance for all schools in the conference. This does not just impact Cal by the way - Wazzu, OSU, UW Stanfurd, UCLA SC, ASU UofA - all have issues with attendance for last minute night games (and frankly games in general). We ALL know that the attendance # announced has no bearing on the real butts-in-seats #. SO making Larry Scott actually confront that, publicly, would be very powerful (but please don't get sidetracked with this last thought).
Anyway, attendance last year for football was abysmal. There is no getting around that. Basketball was even worse (but for more understandable reason). We have THE WORST marketing / leadership of any organization I have ever seen. I'm tired of being politic on that. It needs to change. This incompetence was overcome during the 2000s by our success on the field. It was on full display with disasterous impact furing the transition year at ATT and we really haven't recovered. We're in a free fall - there's simply no denying that. Tweaking around the edges won't work. Doing the same, just more of it and harder, won't work. We need a fundamental transformation. We'll see what happens.