Where did this idea come from that it's some kind of human right to be able to afford attending luxury sporting events?
Nobody "deserves" to be able to attend a live NHL game.
Literally no one said that but the fact that a ticket in Prague should cost 2-3 times more than a ticket in many NHL rinks kinda sucks considering the average salaries in those places. Not surprising but it's worth noting.
Is the 160 Euro price actually the lowest priced tickets that ever existed for these games or was it simply the lowest price for available tickets left when the OP checked the site? Basically, did all the cheaper tickets already sell out?
Exactly my pointYou don’t think when they sell to the rich in North America they aren’t going to do the same in Europe? NHL doesn’t care how hardcore of fan you are they care about your money.
Is the 160 Euro price actually the lowest priced tickets that ever existed for these games or was it simply the lowest price for available tickets left when the OP checked the site? Basically, did all the cheaper tickets already sell out?
tickets are less than $10.
Not our fault your own domestic league is so bad that nobody wants to watch it.
Now you're talking!
An average attendance of 11,586 last season is "nobody"?
Sparta Praha [Czech] yearly attendance at hockeydb.com
A historical graph of the yearly attendance for the Sparta Praha [Czech] of the Czech Republic League.www.hockeydb.com
Either offer prices comparable to those usual for hockey games in this region of Europe (not equal, just comparable), or keep your overpriced circus at home.
The system most successful in bringing people out of poverty has been modern China's 'mixed' or 'pre-socialist' policy. Reducing the amount of poor people from 800 millions to basically zero is precedentless and phenomenal. And i'm sure it wasn't achieved by selling €160 hockey tickets, comrade!No system is perfect, but capitalism has pulled more people out of poverty than any other system known to man. While the alternative gave us dictators like Mao, Stalin, and Pol Pot...
Seems like your own fanbase is willing to spend >10x the price of a Sparta ticket to watch the Buffalo Sabres.
No one is forcing you to go to the circus.Now you're talking!
An average attendance of 11,586 last season is "nobody"?
Sparta Praha [Czech] yearly attendance at hockeydb.com
A historical graph of the yearly attendance for the Sparta Praha [Czech] of the Czech Republic League.www.hockeydb.com
Either offer prices comparable to those usual for hockey games in this region of Europe (not equal, just comparable), or keep your overpriced circus at home.
Wasn't MLS stupid ridiculous when Messi would come to town as well?I paid out the ass to watch Arsenal vs. Chelsea when they came to the US because it's a rare event. It also sold out with like 65K people paying high prices to get in.
This is what happens when leagues play games in another continent.
Wasn't MLS stupid ridiculous when Messi would come to town as well?
Gretzky would have to suit up for the Sabres for that to be a valid comparison. These are just regular season games between two non-playoff teams from last season, one of them a laughing stock of the NHL.
You can buy tickets for the equivalent game in Buffalo for $47Well, I checked the prices immediately after I received the promotional email from the NHL, and the lowest price corresponded to € 160.
You're correct, though. After digging through the ticket portal, I found this:
View attachment 907460
If you can see that extremely small number of dark-red seats behind both goals, practically on the roof, those were apparently available for € 80. The handful of dark-green rows below them went for € 120, and the pink ones were € 140. Only the yellow ones for € 160 were available when I checked the site. Those are now gone, too, with the cheapest tickets available right now at around € 280.
(Will try and modify the thread title if permitted by the software.)
Does lowering the price to sell out always make sense? If you figure you can sell out at price X and sell 80% at price Y and make the same revenue, aren't you further ahead to go with price Y and risk 20% empty seats because if you sell any of those 20%, it's effectively bonus revenue.I mean you have a point , its too expensive for the average peasant (same thing in NA for MTL/TOR games) but if the arena sells out who cares , time will tell but if they pack the arena crying about ticket prices sounds like a you problem , if they can't sell out then yes you have a point they should make them cheaper
Tage Thompson IS Wayne Gretzky compared to anyone playing in the Czech Extraliga.
You can buy tickets for the equivalent game in Buffalo for $47
Does lowering the price to sell out always make sense?
Lol the athletes sure as hell look at as it as a businessTage Thompson is a zero whose name should never occur in the same sentence with Gretzky's, and you know squat about European hockey.
Exactly. In a country with incomparably higher incomes.
You mean business sense. Hate to break it to you, but here in Europe we still like to look at sports primarily from the perspective of sports, not business. If your main goal in life is to make loads of money, do business – don't meddle in sports.
I'm an NHL fan, but I'm saying: keep it on your shores, no need to bring it over here as an overpriced circus for the select rich and crowds of foreign tourists.
Tage Thompson is a zero whose name should never occur in the same sentence with Gretzky's, and you know squat about European hockey.
Exactly. In a country with incomparably higher incomes.
You mean business sense. Hate to break it to you, but here in Europe we still like to look at sports primarily from the perspective of sports, not business. If your main goal in life is to make loads of money, do business – don't meddle in sports.
I'm an NHL fan, but I'm saying: keep it on your shores, no need to bring it over here as an overpriced circus for the select rich and crowds of foreign tourists.