calumnus said:BearSD said:Yup. If, before the Harmon-to-Haas remodel, the athletic department had been able to foresee the sport in 2022, the remodel would have kept approximately the Harmon seating capacity of 6,600, while creating premium seating for high-dollar donors, and maintained the loud, close-to-the-action atmosphere of Harmon.stu said:I suspect everyone envied Harmon. That place was crazy.Civil Bear said:There was a time UCLA players were envious of the environment at Haas.eastcoastcal said:
Since this is my first season, I'm wondering if the attendance this year is in-line with other years or is it down this season? What was attendance like during Cal's better years or in years prior? The games are awesome but it definitely seems like a good amount of empty seats for most games (I understand expectations were low heading into this season though).
With every game on TV today, and with half a dozen other games on TV on any given game night, there are too many other options for Bay Area fans to justify having nearly 12,000 seats.
12,000 seats are not that many if you have a compelling product and the in person experience is great (and most importantly, we are not in the middle of a pandemic and gave a fan base that largely does not believe it is a hoax and wants to act responsibly).
The first order of business should be to restore the in person experience for the students. That means reclaiming for the student section seats that have been base into chair backs so the students are one continuous block that is right in the court, like old Harmon and Haas was originally. It should be opposite the TV cameras and the chair backs. . A lively student section makes for a better game environment for everyone. The sections immediately under the baskets should be GA, for young alumni, overflow for students, anybody who wants to stand and make noise. Maybe giveaway tickets to local HS teams? Definitely Berkeley City College, walking distance from Haas. Maybe some of the uppermost level gets converted to luxury boxes? With TVs and meal/beverage service?
Haas has good BART access. With the Warriors in SF. Cal just needs to create a compelling product for causal fans, especially families. I do think Friday night, Saturday night or Sunday afternoon is a better schedule for everyone, players, students, other in-person fans, TV audiences….
The schedule is what it is because TV money is a priority.
I still would rather have an arena that is smaller and loud, and sold out more often, instead of one that will only be filled when the team wins big and the opponent is compelling.
It's a moot point because the university wouldn't spend the money now on an extensive retrofit even if the powers that be thought it was a good idea.