GBear4Life said:
Looks amazing.
Should be a hoot to drive downtown traffic on game nights.
And even if I were wealthy, I would never pay NBA ticket prices.
A steal!BearDown2o15 said:GBear4Life said:
Looks amazing.
Should be a hoot to drive downtown traffic on game nights.
And even if I were wealthy, I would never pay NBA ticket prices.
Ticket prices aren't that bad. My coworker went to a couple Warriors games this year and I believe the tickets were around $450 a piece.
I'm as baffled as you. I don't have W's tix, but I have had 49ers tix for a long time - lot of the same trends,but ****tier results. About 15% of the folks near us are regulars (either season ticket holders or obvious fans). The remaining 85% are a mix of visiting fans, corporate events or locals obviously experiencing a near once in a lifetime event for them (maybe the boss gave them the corporate seats). Not at all like college atmosphere.GBear4Life said:
Why do people who don't really care about basketball or the Warriors pay these prices??? I like both and won't pay it. I will never understand it. And frankly, the majority of the seats are trash compared to a front row seat view in front of a 75" 4K TV.
The bolded part was true for me both times I went to a 49ers game.BeachedBear said:I'm as baffled as you. I don't have W's tix, but I have had 49ers tix for a long time - lot of the same trends,but ****tier results. About 15% of the folks near us are regulars (either season ticket holders or obvious fans). The remaining 85% are a mix of visiting fans, corporate events or locals obviously experiencing a near once in a lifetime event for them (maybe the boss gave them the corporate seats). Not at all like college atmosphere.GBear4Life said:
Why do people who don't really care about basketball or the Warriors pay these prices??? I like both and won't pay it. I will never understand it. And frankly, the majority of the seats are trash compared to a front row seat view in front of a 75" 4K TV.
I am both, too, and won't pay it either. A lot of folks in this area have a lot of $$$ to throw around these days and the Warriors have been the flavor of the month for the past few years. It's a house of cards. When the Warriors come back down to earth, the environment there is going to be tepid and half-empty. If the economy tanks, even more so. I will laugh.GBear4Life said:
Why do people who don't really care about basketball or the Warriors pay these prices??? I like both and won't pay it. I will never understand it. And frankly, the majority of the seats are trash compared to a front row seat view in front of a 75" 4K TV.
The Warriors became one of the most valuable franchises AFTER Lacob and Gruber took over, and part of the valuation has been the new arena, which the W's own. The team's fans have been diehards for decades, but it's not like all of those fans are from Oakland. Most aren't.79 Bear said:
It will be a much different crowd and I very much doubt Chase will be as loud and raucous as Oracle has been. I think it's a shame and a travesty that Lacob et al. has moved the team (geographically and financially) away from much of its long devoted fan base. The Warriors in Oakland have been one of the most valuable sports franchises ever. This move could very well kill the golden goose.
Plus, people who are from Oakland leave Oaklandbluesaxe said:The Warriors became one of the most valuable franchises AFTER Lacob and Gruber took over, and part of the valuation has been the new arena, which the W's own. The team's fans have been diehards for decades, but it's not like all of those fans are from Oakland. Most aren't.79 Bear said:
It will be a much different crowd and I very much doubt Chase will be as loud and raucous as Oracle has been. I think it's a shame and a travesty that Lacob et al. has moved the team (geographically and financially) away from much of its long devoted fan base. The Warriors in Oakland have been one of the most valuable sports franchises ever. This move could very well kill the golden goose.
Hi there. Were Zelmo Beaty and Bill Bridges on that Hawks team?RichyBear said:
To put it in perspective, in 1968 I went to a Warrior playoff game in Oakland. I got 2 tickets on game day at the Arena for $5 each. Parking was $1.
BTW- The Warrior beat the St. Hawks by 1 point on a last second shot by Jeff Mullins.
Hi there. Were Zelmo Beaty and Bill Bridges on that Hawks team?Quote:
RichyBear said:
To put it in perspective, in 1968 I went to a Warrior playoff game in Oakland. I got 2 tickets on game day at the Arena for $5 each. Parking was $1.
BTW- The Warrior beat the St. Hawks by 1 point on a last second shot by Jeff Mullins.
that would be wasted marketing dollars.HoopDreams said:
I hope Cal markets to the east bay warriors fans who won't follow them to SF
lolGBear4Life said:that would be wasted marketing dollars.HoopDreams said:
I hope Cal markets to the east bay warriors fans who won't follow them to SF
so I'm sure Cal will do that.
But if ticket prices are going to be significantly higher I anticipate that will affect the make-up of the crowd. During the playoffs (when ticket prices are highest) the crowd was noted by players and media to be less vocal than usual. Will the crowd in SF be as loud as the fans before them?bluesaxe said:The Warriors became one of the most valuable franchises AFTER Lacob and Gruber took over, and part of the valuation has been the new arena, which the W's own. The team's fans have been diehards for decades, but it's not like all of those fans are from Oakland. Most aren't.79 Bear said:
It will be a much different crowd and I very much doubt Chase will be as loud and raucous as Oracle has been. I think it's a shame and a travesty that Lacob et al. has moved the team (geographically and financially) away from much of its long devoted fan base. The Warriors in Oakland have been one of the most valuable sports franchises ever. This move could very well kill the golden goose.
That's all true. It happened at the Coliseum when they renovated and shipped everyone to San Jose for a year, screwed longtime season ticket holders out of their seniority status, and raised prices. It happened when what is now Oracle Park in SF opened and the Giants left Candlestick. Eventually the crowds in both places got better again.79 Bear said:But if ticket prices are going to be significantly higher I anticipate that will affect the make-up of the crowd. During the playoffs (when ticket prices are highest) the crowd was noted by players and media to be less vocal than usual. Will the crowd in SF be as loud as the fans before them?bluesaxe said:The Warriors became one of the most valuable franchises AFTER Lacob and Gruber took over, and part of the valuation has been the new arena, which the W's own. The team's fans have been diehards for decades, but it's not like all of those fans are from Oakland. Most aren't.79 Bear said:
It will be a much different crowd and I very much doubt Chase will be as loud and raucous as Oracle has been. I think it's a shame and a travesty that Lacob et al. has moved the team (geographically and financially) away from much of its long devoted fan base. The Warriors in Oakland have been one of the most valuable sports franchises ever. This move could very well kill the golden goose.
I realize ticket prices have not been cheap in Oakland in recent years but they are looking to be even more expensive at Chase and that will certainly affect the demographics of attendees. Perhaps Lacob and Gruber have this figured out. It remains to be seen.
All I know is that the Oracle fans were historically very loud and supportive. Tim Roye often commented on that, as did others. It was often said that the Oracle crowd was one of the loudest and most supportive in the NBA. I suspect a lot of that had to do with the fact that fans waited a long time for the team to perform as it has in the past 5 years. Now that they are coming off of a great run, with a much different team in the coming season, at a new location, with higher ticket prices, it will be interesting to see how the fans react. I hope the fan support continues. We will see soon enough.
That's the downside for fans. The upside is that the same ownership that hoovers up all this money is also willing to have four players on max contracts, and pay far more "luxury tax" than any other team. That's something that not even a super-fan owner would do if his arena was not one of the top 5 money generators in the NBA.Quote:
Sad fact is that all major league sports are pricing themselves out of the typical family budget, and Oracle was doing the same the last few years.
Barry with the great Jeff Mullins in the background?bearister said:
There were fools all over who considered Bobby Rowell a sharp NBA business mind because the W's were profitable while constantly losing. The never noticed the fact that it was the luxury tax distributions and league tv contracts making that happen, or the massive potential the franchise offered if anyone actually gave a damn about building a team. Lacob et al. taking over for Cohan was the biggest thing in the history of the franchise.ClayK said:
Great point ... you can keep prices low, generate less revenue and lose games.
Or you can generate as much income as possible, sign the best possible players (pay the luxury tax) and be a contender.
It comforts me knowing he had to give a large portion of it to the IRS thoughbearister said:
....and to think, that icehole Cohan quadrupled his investment the day he sold the Warriors.
it's particularly funny when people complain about outrageous salaries of players and wealth of the owners as they pay $500 for game tickets wearing a $150 throwback NBA jersey and subscribe to NBA TV lolClayK said:
Great point ... you can keep prices low, generate less revenue and lose games.
Or you can generate as much income as possible, sign the best possible players (pay the luxury tax) and be a contender.
BearNakedLadies said:It comforts me knowing he had to give a large portion of it to the IRS thoughbearister said:
....and to think, that icehole Cohan quadrupled his investment the day he sold the Warriors.
GBear4Life said:
Looks amazing.
Should be a hoot to drive downtown traffic on game nights.
And even if I were wealthy, I would never pay NBA ticket prices.