Turducken
Starter
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2017
- Messages
- 542
I'm a season ticket holder but I live in Oregon. Only make a few games per season (going Monday). The rest go to friends or to rams fans I find online. If that doesn't work then I list on TM (only once this season).
From my perspective there are five kinds of season ticket holders:
1. Non- fan investors. The SSL is significant, but you can sell some games at 3x ticket value. They root for the Rams mostly because it increases return on investment. Getting cheap playoff tix is a great return.
2. Corporate holders. They don't usually sell them but consider them write offs they give to employees, customers, etc.
3. Fans who sell some tix strategically to cover the cost of their tix or to make a little more. These fans sell whenever ticket prices are high for widespread/ traveling fan bases (cowboys, raiders, steelers, 9ers, packers, broncos, etc). They don't worry about who buys their tix, they just list them on Ticketmaster whenever the prices are over 200% of face value.
4. Fans who try (very hard) to sell to other fans, but will list on ticketmaster if they can't move them at face value.
5. Die hard Fans that would leave a seat empty before they would risk selling to an opposing fan.
Most owners are in group 3. I'm in group 4. I don't know anyone in group 5, but I assume they exist.
From my perspective there are five kinds of season ticket holders:
1. Non- fan investors. The SSL is significant, but you can sell some games at 3x ticket value. They root for the Rams mostly because it increases return on investment. Getting cheap playoff tix is a great return.
2. Corporate holders. They don't usually sell them but consider them write offs they give to employees, customers, etc.
3. Fans who sell some tix strategically to cover the cost of their tix or to make a little more. These fans sell whenever ticket prices are high for widespread/ traveling fan bases (cowboys, raiders, steelers, 9ers, packers, broncos, etc). They don't worry about who buys their tix, they just list them on Ticketmaster whenever the prices are over 200% of face value.
4. Fans who try (very hard) to sell to other fans, but will list on ticketmaster if they can't move them at face value.
5. Die hard Fans that would leave a seat empty before they would risk selling to an opposing fan.
Most owners are in group 3. I'm in group 4. I don't know anyone in group 5, but I assume they exist.
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