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  1. #1

    Default Yankees and Mets are charging too much for their tickets

    http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=4093702

    The Yankees are charging $500-$2,625 for Legends Suite tickets in 25 sections at the new Yankee Stadium in the first nine rows around the infield, an area that contains 1,895 seats.
    While those seats were filled for the April 16 opener, they were more than half-empty for the remaining five games on the homestand. Some entire sections were unfilled

    Fuk them, people aren't going to pay that much to see this crap when its free on TV

  2. #2

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    yankees look like morons. 1.5 billion and the place isn't even half full.

  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by Slim View Post
    yankees look like morons.
    Yes, the NY Yankee organization is retarded

  4. #4

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    With the economy down, all of these companies that wrote out blank checks for expensive tickets are now reducing expenses and not buying these tickets. Who else is going to buy these tickets? No one can afford them and are not worth it.

  5. #5

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    whats the cheapest ticket to get into that place, to sit anywhere?

  6. #6

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    i guess they need to pay for the new stadium?
    or just greedy

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by BigBrownman View Post
    whats the cheapest ticket to get into that place, to sit anywhere?
    Don't have it in front of me now but I think the outfield terraces are about $23 before fees. But the majority of seats are $50+

  8. #8

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    It's a shame they are trying to rape the average fan....looks like it might have backfired on them because at most games a fair amount of these high end seats remain empty.

  9. #9

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    Get a clue guys. The article Brock posted is about the Legends suites, all teams have expensive premium seats, its a corporate draw and is a no brainer. The Yankees are charging $25 for infield upper deck, how is that trying to "rape the average fan"? Is the average fan entitled to field level, behind the plate seats for super cheap?

    You can get tickets to a low attendance game on the secondary market for $5-10 dollars.

    "Fuk them, people aren't going to pay that much to see this crap when its free on TV." You think these are the only seats in the stadium? Get a clue man and stop rabble rousing.

    CHARITY DONOR
    12/03/2011 $25 donation


  10. #10

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    mets tickets are 25 bucks i thought. bobby took a pic

  11. #11

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    come on boner, you'd NEVER see empty seats in the first set of rows, in huge sections like that at the old stadium.

  12. #12

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    Oh, Im not saying they will sell them. I'm sure there will be plenty of games those seats go unsold, and yes they are overpriced. That doesn't mean that the Yanks are ripping the average fan off. Stating that 1,895 seats are overpriced hardly imports the conclusion that people will stay at home to watch the games, or that they are screwing the average fan.

    Yeah Yankees games are expensive, and prices for those seats are downright ridiculous. But, it's not like they put attending a game out of reach for even the humblest of Bronx Youth. Business as usual here, this is certainly not news.

    CHARITY DONOR
    12/03/2011 $25 donation


  13. #13

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    Blame the retarded Tankee fans.

    They wanted them to sign all these high priced free agents. What did they expect, that they wouldnt have to foot the bill?

  14. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by daggerkobe View Post
    Blame the retarded Tankee fans.

    They wanted them to sign all these high priced free agents. What did they expect, that they wouldnt have to foot the bill?
    shhhhhh.

    CHARITY DONOR
    12/03/2011 $25 donation


  15. #15

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    You guys need to understand that even though they haven't sold out the expensive seats (which constitute 10% of the stadium) they have sold out ALL THE OTHER SEATS. The stadium holds over 60,000 people. Trust me, the Yankees are doing just fine. Keep in mind I HATE THE YANKEES!!

  16. #16

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    Mets tickets are different amounts, depending on what team they are playing.

    The cheapest tickets are $14, when they play the shIt teams. These tickets at the lower prices are sold out for the first couple of months.
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  17. #17

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    CNNSI has an article about this topic as well

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200...ets/index.html

    When it comes to the illusionary art of surface patriotism, no American sports franchise trumps the New York Yankees.
    Much like one of those mid-World War II cinema shorts urging citizens to do their part for the greater good, the Bronx Bombers spare little expense in reminding visitors that, gosh darn it, you sure are lucky to live in such a fine country. You want bald eagles swooping through the stadium air? The Yanks -- come playoff time -- are your team. You want American flags billowing in the wind? Ditto. The Yankees blare God Bless America in the middle of the seventh inning of every game, and as you read this a man named Bradford Campeau-Laurion is suing the Yankees for allegedly ejecting him from the stadium after he left his seat to use the bathroom during the playing of the song. The nerve of young Bradford. The nerve.
    Thing is, like the expiration date on a chunk of really expensive Bergenost, image without substance only lasts for so long. New York's baseball fans are glad to idolize Derek Jeter as an American icon. They are glad to equate the interlocking N and Y with our nation's pride in athletic excellence. They are glad to push forth the half-myth, half-truth that, in the aftermath of Sept. 11, the Yankees gave city denizens a reason to go on.
    They are not, however, willing to be hoodwinked. Not now, in this country's worst economic crisis since the trio of Jesse Hill, George Selkirk and Ben Chapman patrolled the Yankee Stadium outfield. Not now, as the unemployment rate rises and the confidence of a people plummets.
    In case you haven't heard, the Yankees have opened their new, state-of-the-art stadium by asking their dutiful fans to pay inordinate amounts of money for the right to sit in a plastic chair, drink $9 bottles of beer and watch Cody Ransom. To be precise, individual-game tickets range from $14 for bleacher seats to $2,625 to sit mere feet away from the batter's box. Yet here's the wacky part -- with the economy mimicking a Jason Marquis sinker (down-down-down-plop), there are a limited number of cheap seats, leaving gameday fans with an onerous choice: spend a small fortune on a ticket, or don't go.
    Throughout New York, baseball diehards talk of team devotion in the same way they refer to beloved-yet-flawed family members. Just listen to the banal jabber on the area's top sports talk station, WFAN, where "real fans" and "fake fans" are apparently divided by the number of games they attend, the number of jerseys they own and the number of times they've called out David Ortiz or Josh Beckett on their yankeesrulez blogs. "Real fans," the logic goes, live and die with the pinstripes, call in sick to work after a playoff loss, name their children Gehrig and Jeter, and make the stadium their second home.
    Yet loyalty, like Madison Avenue, is often a one-way street. As seemingly hundreds of thousands of hard-working, struggling-to-stay-afloat enthusiasts take a vow of allegiance to the Yankees, the Yankees, to be blunt, spit tobacco juice in their faces. Imagine, say, your local deli decided that, in the midst of a financial free fall, prices would be increased by as much as 75 percent (and don't forget that the, ahem, deli received enormous tax breaks not offered to other businesses). Would you ever again stop in for that chocolate milk and Hostess Fruit Pie?
    For a franchise that has long flaunted its patriotism, one must ask, where is that help-thy-neighbor American spirit when we actually need it? In 2001 it was easy for the Yankees to fly a tattered flag from Ground Zero and unearth President Bush to throw out the first pitch of Game 3 of the World Series. Emotional as those moments felt, they were, relatively speaking, no-brainers. Eight years later, people are once again struggling. They are losing jobs. Losing investments. Losing homes. They could use a good faith gesture of keeping the ticket prices the same as a year ago. Baseball, after all, is the ultimate stress-buster: Enduring a tough day? Kick back in the sun for nine innings, down a beverage, keep score, relax.
    So, with that in mind, has the franchise valued at $1.5 billion by Forbes magazine moved to decrease ticket prices? Not likely, though commissioner Bud Selig is now getting involved. With a jarring (and, many would agree, justified) number of unfilled blue "premium" seats making the new Yankee Stadium appear to be half empty on TV -- consider the numbers: with nearly 4,000 fewer seats the Yankees are averaging 8,500 fewer fans in a new stadium -- Hal Steinbrenner and Co. could have stepped up and offered the vacant turf for temporarily discounted costs; could have donated the seats to a local YMCA or Boys & Girls Club; could have done 8,000 things to help make right a time period gone bad.
    Instead -- My Country, 'Tis of Thee -- the Yankees hired Douglas Elliman Worldwide Consulting, which promotes and markets real estate projects for developers, to peddle the seats to high-end residential customers. (Translation: To hell with the little guy).
    Luckily, there still remains one way to score $10 box seats; one way to sit up close for an affordable price and watch professional players give their all.
    The Newark Bears' season opens today.

  18. #18

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    In the interest of fair and balanced coverage here:

    Prices Slashed

    CHARITY DONOR
    12/03/2011 $25 donation


  19. #19

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    Not only they charge a lot for tickets but the games are fukking too long at Yankees Stadium cause the starters can't get out of the 2nd inning and the bullpen blows.

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