Interesting.
I do think there will still be purchases by business interests, just NOT AS MUCH. But, nobody knows how big a decline it will be first year. I’d guess, 30-50%, which is a very painful blow.
But, just wait until the firs business hiccup comes along and the board of directors says to slash and and all unnecessary spending. LOL, there will not be a penny of corporate money going to pro/college sports.
In the end, this will help fix sports. Fans should be able to have access to affordable tix, not inflated nonsense pricing.
The worst of all this is coming to the perennial losers that have only survived due to corporate tickets. Those games where a 30k stadium has 8000 people show up. Generally, those 8000 people didn’t pay a dime for those tickets, they were corporate freebies.
Same goes for stadium concessions then. The prices were totally retarded because the vendors counted on the generous credit cards of salesman wining and dining customers.
I own a financial institution. Most of my colleagues are conservative in the money business. We collectively no longer clamor for tix because we despise the NBA and NFL because of all the things that you are aware of here.
Once this implosion gathers some steam, next thing you know the advertisers will no longer want to pay for in stadium advertising, tv and radio commercials....
Anyone that thinks this is “no big deal” is kidding themselves.
Once this implosion gathers some steam, next thing you know the advertisers will no longer want to pay for in stadium advertising, tv and radio commercials....
Anyone that thinks this is no big deal is kidding themselves.
“As you noted in your reply, the marginal teams will be the big losers.”
Also, the basic law of economics, supply and demand will continue to hammer down the prices of tickets.