Dominater wrote:Novocaine wrote:pb-ceo wrote:the nba is changed forever. the average man on teh street can not afford to go to games. it's the elite and corporations that will occupy the seats. and they will be on their phones all game. they will arrive late. they will leave early. and they will go drink and socialize at half time. enjoy your new nba fans. it's deserved.
there are only a very few players in the league that can afford to simply think about "rings" when they sign deals. rings are the last thing on most player's minds when you are talking about his kind of wealth.
Absolute nonsense. NBA tickets prices haven't really been increasing above inflation prices and there are still plenty of opportunities to get bargains as long as you're not looking for premium seats in contending teams or playoffs (but those have been expensive for many years now). All this additional money comes from the TV deals (and increased sponsorship) - and actually it's only half of that increase in revenue. Teams can pay all these contracts and still improve their financial situation without increasing tickets prices.
Not for us Bulls fans. Prices have skyrocketed in the last few years.Its about $100 bucks a pop now for the top of the nosebleeds. I guess some of that is the bandwagon fans ruining it too once 2011 hit. In 2009, I went to that epic Bulls/Celtics game 6. i bought the tix about a week before the game, sat fairly low in the nosebleeds for $60. 2 years later game 1 round 1 vs Indiana wouldve ran me $100
Chicago, Lakers, Knicks and now GSW have the highest tickets prices in the NBA and are in a class apart. Plus, in the Bulls case it was a perfect storm: 2008 to 2010 were recessionary years where teams were struggling to renew season tickets without any price increases, the Bulls got better just exactly when the economy was picking up steam. You can still buy season tickets for the Bulls for $40ish if you don't mind the bad seats though.
The average ticket price in the NBA has increased less than $10 in the last 10 years and it's still significantly lower than the average NFL or NHL ticket price, or the average ticket price for a premium soccer match in Europe.
http://www.statista.com/statistics/193430/average-ticket-price-in-the-nba-since-2006/