If you think this is just about Portland State, think again.
http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/10458047/next-generation-ticket-holder-concern-students-show-college-football-games" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
This is an issue that has had focus since near the beginning of the football season (and I may have posted this here before, I know I did elsewhere)... http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304795804579097223907738780" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
People read the WSJ article and came to the conclusion that students want better Wi-Fi at games and may not be interested in watching, say, Georgia v North Texas (which, BTW, cannot be good news for Portland State). As Darren Rovell dug deeper with the ESPN article, he's finding other things.
- Money. Even if it's not a problem for students to get in, they can smell it when their team is up 40... or down 40.
- The live event has become secondary to the televised event. Think about the team that can barely cross the 50... and you have tickets on the other end. Meanwhile, the picture quality of the television is so good that students are getting better information from their friends in a bar (via cellphone) than they are from the replay screen in the stadium.
- Kind of related... but student sections, over the last few dozen years, have been pushed further and further away from the center of the field, from better seats (in many stadia, not all) because the money is in big donors wanting those seats. Of course, it begs a question when OSU (or Arizona) still have good seats for their students while Oregon students are in a corner and yet have a much better program... yep, the money matters.
- Alcohol (a problem Portland State doesn't have). The older students want it. (BTW, you should hear this subject come up in Boise, where a lot of fans really object to that concept. As someone else put it, "we're too close to SLC."
- Atmosphere got a soft sell in the article, but Rovell tweeted something a couple hours after the article was released: "Hardest battle at college football games: 60-year-old & 18-year-old fan want different atmosphere."
The obvious overarching issue here... if you're not roping in more students now, will they buy season tickets later on? I have serious doubts about that. A bigger problem to me... my Twitter feed has been full all basketball season of pictures from arenas of schools that are generally good draws, but aren't filling seats. I am coming to the conclusion that college athletics are not a good place to "invest" right now, outside a few established programs. What Portland State may be suffering is a "nationalization" of college sports. It's one thing if Portlanders don't really care about Portland State. What about Oregon State? What about, oh, 80% of BCS schools that are trying to keep up (and not generally succeeding) with the 20% that have major money and history and are really the ones ESPN (and the other networks) actually want to put on their broadcasts?
http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/10458047/next-generation-ticket-holder-concern-students-show-college-football-games" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
This is an issue that has had focus since near the beginning of the football season (and I may have posted this here before, I know I did elsewhere)... http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304795804579097223907738780" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
People read the WSJ article and came to the conclusion that students want better Wi-Fi at games and may not be interested in watching, say, Georgia v North Texas (which, BTW, cannot be good news for Portland State). As Darren Rovell dug deeper with the ESPN article, he's finding other things.
- Money. Even if it's not a problem for students to get in, they can smell it when their team is up 40... or down 40.
- The live event has become secondary to the televised event. Think about the team that can barely cross the 50... and you have tickets on the other end. Meanwhile, the picture quality of the television is so good that students are getting better information from their friends in a bar (via cellphone) than they are from the replay screen in the stadium.
- Kind of related... but student sections, over the last few dozen years, have been pushed further and further away from the center of the field, from better seats (in many stadia, not all) because the money is in big donors wanting those seats. Of course, it begs a question when OSU (or Arizona) still have good seats for their students while Oregon students are in a corner and yet have a much better program... yep, the money matters.
- Alcohol (a problem Portland State doesn't have). The older students want it. (BTW, you should hear this subject come up in Boise, where a lot of fans really object to that concept. As someone else put it, "we're too close to SLC."
- Atmosphere got a soft sell in the article, but Rovell tweeted something a couple hours after the article was released: "Hardest battle at college football games: 60-year-old & 18-year-old fan want different atmosphere."
The obvious overarching issue here... if you're not roping in more students now, will they buy season tickets later on? I have serious doubts about that. A bigger problem to me... my Twitter feed has been full all basketball season of pictures from arenas of schools that are generally good draws, but aren't filling seats. I am coming to the conclusion that college athletics are not a good place to "invest" right now, outside a few established programs. What Portland State may be suffering is a "nationalization" of college sports. It's one thing if Portlanders don't really care about Portland State. What about Oregon State? What about, oh, 80% of BCS schools that are trying to keep up (and not generally succeeding) with the 20% that have major money and history and are really the ones ESPN (and the other networks) actually want to put on their broadcasts?