Originally posted by DoubleJayAlum
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Sorry, but there is NO way the ACC tournament in Tampa this year outdrew the MVC tournament in St. Louis.
The figures released by the ACC (as well as the Big12 and probably others) are the arena capacity multiplied by the number of sessions and have no bearing on actual attendance. To get an accurate picture of the ACC draw outside of the shadows of the NC schools, multiply the “official” figures by 0.5 to 0.6.
They love to be considered a traveling juggernaut, but the truth is they are not. The only sellout, if I recall correctly, was the final.
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Originally posted by raycSorry, but there is NO way the ACC tournament in Tampa this year outdrew the MVC tournament in St. Louis.
The figures released by the ACC (as well as the Big12 and probably others) are the arena capacity multiplied by the number of sessions and have no bearing on actual attendance. To get an accurate picture of the ACC draw outside of the shadows of the NC schools, multiply the “official” figures by 0.5 to 0.6.
They love to be considered a traveling juggernaut, but the truth is they are not. The only sellout, if I recall correctly, was the final.
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They don’t “fib a little”, they lie through their teeth. Tickets available for sale at the gate at game time belie a “ticket sales” in lieu of “turnstile count” argument.
There are no rules or regulations that require accurate figures on attendance; if the league office (any league) announced 100,000 as the game attendance, that would be the “official” tournament attendance figure published and used by the NCAA, although reporting more than 100% of capacity would likely draw some ridicule.
A local reporter here in Tampa asked the ACC league office why they were reporting sellouts when there were no more than a couple of thousand in attendance. The league response was that the “official attendance” is the number of tickets released by the league office. Since 100% of the tickets are released, all games will be reported as sellouts.
This “accounting method” appears to be popular with other BCS conferences as well. It’s more than an ego trip for them, although that is part of it. These figures are what cities base their calculations on when they determine how many tax dollars to spend to get a tournament to come to their town. When there is no law against lying and there is money to be made by doing so, don’t expect the truth.
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I’m speculating, of course, but based on the fact that the MVC championship game was #1 in attendance, and the MVC has 5 sessions vs. 6 sessions for many conferences, the MVC would probably have ranked #1 in average attendance and in the top 2 or 3 in total attendance.
Not that it would matter, if everyone used this method of counting, attendance figures would only tell you who booked the largest arena.
I’m just old school on attendance figures; they should reflect turnstile count only. If a team or conference wants to include tickets sold or any other criteria as an addendum, that’s fine, but attendance figures should reflect just that.
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Originally posted by rrshockSo where would the MVC stand if they did the same thing?
Obviously for those travelling from as far away as both WSu and CU do, my recommendation is to purchase the all session pass through the school. I've done that for years and have never had to to find tickets. The only time you have to deal with scalpers is if you want to sell some of your tix.
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Originally posted by DoubleJayAlumOriginally posted by rrshockSo where would the MVC stand if they did the same thing?
Obviously for those travelling from as far away as both WSu and CU do, my recommendation is to purchase the all session pass through the school. I've done that for years and have never had to to find tickets. The only time you have to deal with scalpers is if you want to sell some of your tix.
<Just messin' with you.>
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"Several thousand"??????????????????????????
Let's be realistic. The only way that statement would be even remotely close is if it was worded as follows:
"There were several thousand Nebraska football fans in St Louis that wanted to bandwaggon on the Bluejay basketball team train that found trading Husker Bill Bobblehead dolls for semi final tickets next to impossible".
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WuDrWu:
"There were several thousand Nebraska football fans in St Louis that wanted to bandwaggon on the Bluejay basketball team train that found trading Husker Bill Bobblehead dolls for semi final tickets next to impossible".
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I think this is gonna be the year that I buy the all-session tickets. The baby will be almost 1, my now 2 1/2 yr old has been once, but wasn't old enough to remember, and should enjoy St. Louis.
It would be great for the MVC to actually sell out on all-session passes this season. A team needs to hit the top 15 and stay there for it to happen, but I feel it is possible. 2 teams in the top 25 going to St. Louis would make it even better.
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