buckeyesin07
Veni. Vidi. Vici.
Buckeye Maniac;2295564; said:This is the site I used to find ticket prices. On the side bar it lists conferences, and if you click that it'll show prices by school.
Based on that article, which granted is from 2010, the ''premium'' tickets would be the highest cost tickets in the country, tied with tickets to the Oklahoma - Ok State game from that year.
Tickets to OSU games already cost more than tickets to normal Nebraska games, despite Nebraska having a considerably smaller stadium and arguably more demand, seeing as they've sold out every game since the 70's.
OSU tickets cost almost double Stanford ''high demand game'' tickets, despite Stanford needing the revenue to support almost as many sports as OSU has.
OSU tickets are more than normal Alabama games as well, despite Alabama having even more success than we have recently.
I don't think the price increase is going to do anything to stop money being lost to scalpers. Only way they're going to stop scalpers from getting money off of tickets is if they charge so much that no one buys them at all.
I'm not sure how any of this is responsive to my post. Who cares if OSU charges more? If you're right in your guess that teams like Nebraska "have arguably more demand," then the market will bear that out and OSU will lose customers and be forced to drop its price back to current levels. BTW--you're kidding yourself if you think that's going to happen.
As for your claim that this isn't "going to do anything to stop money being lost to scalpers," well, if you really think that more of what scalpers currently make off $70 tickets won't be retained by the university now charging $125 for the same tickets, then I don't know how anyone can explain it to you. Of course it won't eliminate scalpers altogether, but it certainly will redistribute some of the money they currently make back to the university. And that's a good thing, IMO.
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