@Doss2k@newsobserver Unless I’m reading wrong - assuming they already bought their book for everything they then could go in and buy extras and that’s where they got hit with dynamic prices, etc. non-story…. Or that part at least isn’t the story.
@BSO Depends - if you’re selling everything then this is common sense. If you’re not… relax, it isn’t a cheap ticket and you can make a lot of the book back by selling 1-2 games.
@marcushartman I know how it works I just don’t understand conceptually how you can have more than capacity. Shouldn’t those numbers be included in capacity?
Canes make national news being more expensive than NBA finals game 1 (maybe a sign that hockey is back)? And lawmakers are like whoa whoa, we can’t have ticket prices this high.
Let’s be realistic - first time hosting in 20 years. Maybe I don’t want to go to all the games as a STH because I can sell one game and pay for the entire series. “Real fans” can sell tickets too. “Real fans” don’t go to every single game.
get it, it’s the Stanley Cup Final, but when nosebleed seats are going for $1,000, lower-bowl tickets are around $3,000, and even the cheapest tickets you can find are still $500–$600, that’s pretty damn impressive.”
@mjguff@EliNJERSEY It’s really not that hard to figure out. If tickets were $100 they probably wouldn’t try to sell. But if I know I have access to games 2,5,7…. And game 1 gets me $3k…. I’m doing that every single time! Especially on a Tuesday night.