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Well, the announcement appeared in the newspaper today. U-M plans to add 4 rows of seats 3/4 of the way around the Big House, and 3 rows on the west side, to add about 5200 seats. This will bring official capacity up from about 102K to 107K. They had to give students split season tickets this year, and want to fix that, They also have a waiting list of several thousand long to get season tickets. At least they aren't going to increase the capacity by redefining everyone's butt to be narrower, like last time. They are going to spent millions of $$ on this, and it should be ready by the beginning of the football season next year. Spokesmen denied that the size of the stadium in Knoxville, TN, had anything to do with the decision. It currently seats 44 more people than Michigan Stadium. The Big House will regain its #1 position with this move, however, by 5100+. I wonder where they will park the extra cars.
11 responses total.
That's another 5,200 naked people for Harvey's "Nude Millenium" celebration in a few years!
They didn't *have* to not offer complete season tickets this year - what a crock. Squeezing out students is BS - the players are ostensibly fellow students. I know it's a big money deal, but that was a bad decision.
Slight factual error. THe Tenessee stadium has 43 more seats, NOT 44. They have 102,544, we have 102,501 (the 1 seat is Fielding Yost's seat (a little bit of worthless tradition))
I didn't follow that Kevin. They didn't have enough seats for all the students. That sucks, but what should they have done? oops. nice catch, Eric.
My point is that they certainly *could* have reserved enough *full* season tickets for the students if they wanted to, but chose to sell to alumni etc. instead (who have to pay more $ for tickets, or maybe not...).
Yeah, they do pay more for tickets., but they didn't increase the number of season tickets that they sold to the public. The reason for the shortage is that the entire stadium was sold out (has been every year) and then the number of students who wanted tickets increased. They would have had to take season tickets away from people who had them the previous year. I don't think greed was the cause of the problem.
Well if that's the case, I retract my statements and bad feelings! :-) However, perhaps that points to a need to not sell all the season tickets ahead of time, until the students have gotten the chance to fill their demands. If there are any left over, they'll sell out in a heartbeat to the general public.
The problem with that is that once you get season tickets, the U wants to give you priority over newer buyers. So they have been selling the same number of season tickets for some time now, replacing only those buyers who decline to renew. Another problem is that season tickets are sold to the general public in May, and delivered in August. Yeah, they could do what you suggest at the last mninute, but it sounds unfair to the ticketholders who would get turned away from renewing, only tohave their tickets become available to the general public.
I understand, but ostensibly the students should come first. Yeah, I should get a reality check, I know! :-)
I was kinda hopin that the U would just add 44, then each other year we will add 1 more, and in the off years Tenessee adds 1, so we have a war to be part of "The largest crowd witnessing a college football game in America this afternoon". Oh well, we'll get to continue our streak of 141 consecutive 100,000 plus crowds (that number will increase to 142 when Michigan hosts Ohio State next week)
Well, there is the question of whether the attendance will set the all-time record for the stadium. We know it will next year when there are 5200 seats. We'll know tomorrow, but I wouldn't be surprised if they pack them into the pressbox like sardines.
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