Was the attendance at last nights game. I thought winning would bring out the fans. Instead, everyone wants to watch at home. Maybe we should drop basketball.
You certainly don't have all of the answers!!Shocky1 said:
^ or maybe fire the worthless bureaucrats markeisha everett & jim knowlton who got no idea how to market/sell tixs to women's basketball depute its attendance crushing records being set across the nation this season??
the men's basketball attendance is also abysmal, just winning games does NOT increase a fanbase in the modern era
don't be a dumb azz#
I so agree re. Cal marketing. I'm about to start posting to Nextdoor, and to our residential housing complex, about Haas games, emphasizing to some degree how much kids and teenagers enjoy them (and the value of having children grow up watching women in sports; plays well in the East Bay...).CalWSportsFan said:
Well let's see Cal marketing step up? What have they done really? Anything? Seems Charmin and co try their best on social media but WHAT is Cal marketing doing?
Brilliant idea; please nag the Athletic Department.CalWSportsFan said:
Also, why not reach out to Valkyries and see if there can be some kind of free ticket promotion or at least promote games (for Cal and Stanford) via their email list. I know Stanford has an upcoming tournament to be held at the Chase Center later this month....https://chasecenter.com/events/invisalign-bay-area-womens-classic-20241220/
....makes sense to leverage the Bay Area fan bases for both college and
WNBA since there will be much cross-over appeal I'd think?
I just subscribed to two season tickets for the Valkyries (despite their hideous logo/uniforms) and will make sure to wear my Cal gear proudly during those games...
Agreed. And since we are now playing more teams from the eastern time zone, the early start time will occur more often.glutton said:
I agree that Cal marketing is lousy, but it's always been hard to draw a crowd for a 6pm weeknight game.
It used to be. But now we have the same problem in football. Where exactly did creating this type of obnoxious environment come from?wvitbear said:
It is aways better live than on TV.
I tried. Got a canned answer about responding to what players and many fans like. Why don't they just look at the empty seats?BearBint said:
"The current game day experience, with loud incessant canned music, cannot have been requested by the customers. When you cannot even talk to the person next to you, staying home and watching on television is a good option."
I very much agree about the damned music. Whom do we write about this, perhaps pulling a little rank about being a long-time season ticket holder, etc., etc.?
The best fans in the game – period.
— Golden State Valkyries (@wnbagoldenstate) November 12, 2024
20,000 season ticket deposits and another day closer to tip-off at Chase Center. Let’s keep making history together. #JointheAscent pic.twitter.com/vMOlRc6qk3
this is NOT gonna move the dial on growing the fanbase, if people have never been to a wbb game then just winning won't materially change the attendance numbersannarborbear said:
There are now two important further steps in regaining fan interest:
1. Get back in the AP and Coaches Poll Top 25 - Which now seems realistic.
2. Beat Stanford - Which will generate a lot of local positive press and publicity.
And then once the fans return, improve the game day experience so that they will want to come back.
BearBint said:
"The current game day experience, with loud incessant canned music, cannot have been requested by the customers. When you cannot even talk to the person next to you, staying home and watching on television is a good option."
I very much agree about the damned music. Whom do we write about this, perhaps pulling a little rank about being a long-time season ticket holder, etc., etc.?
Attendance at the event is the barometer of whether a program should exist?wvitbear said:
Was the attendance at last nights game. I thought winning would bring out the fans. Instead, everyone wants to watch at home. Maybe we should drop basketball.
Right, because females supporting female sports directly has never been a correlation in research and focus groups going back to the 90s.ClayK said:
The best pool of available attendees is students.
Tween and teen female athletes do not have the time to come to games in Berkeley. Their schedules are packed with practices, games, academics and school social life.
Older fans, like most of us here, don't like the music and the noise and the hassle so it takes some strong motivation to get us to the gym.
And then there are basketball fans, who can choose from a bunch of live events: college men, high school boys, high school girls (there are some entertaining games there too), the Warriors, other women's teams. A good high school boys' game in a packed gym is a fun experience, for $10, free parking and easy access (usually). Those who live close to Berkeley can get to Cal games more easily than St. Mary's or Santa Clara, but those who live elsewhere (Walnut Creek, say) have easier options.
Or they can stay home, and pick and choose from about 25 games every night.
And most alums will go to the men's games rather than the women's, given a choice. Going to both is a huge commitment of time and energy.
Which again brings us back to students, especially female students. If female students supported the women's team as much as they do the men's team, that would be a huge difference. But they don't, and never have, even at schools where the women's team is very good. Some do, of course, but the bulk of students go to men's games.
It's possible to flip that demographic, though, but it's the most accessible and also does the most to create a fun and energetic atmosphere.
That is such a nasty taunt, and I just love it.wvitbear said:
My favorite cheer by the Straw hat Band is when an opposing player misses free throw, they shout "You let the whole team down".. Great cheer.
That is an interesting point. A friend of 50 years follows football (family's from Nebraska) and the Warriors, and had a soccer-playing daughter of whom she was very proud. All this, plus being a Marxist, feminist labor organizer, etc. My friend will combine live football games with a short vacation in L.A. or Vegas or wherever, but she still does not go to WBB games, and never has. Less dynamic/speedy/potentially, excitingly dangerous? No hot male athletes?ClayK said:
Which again brings us back to students, especially female students. If female students supported the women's team as much as they do the men's team, that would be a huge difference. But they don't, and never have, even at schools where the women's team is very good. Some do, of course, but the bulk of students go to men's games.