Marlins selling unused tickets to Henderson Alvarez’s no-hitter
Though they finished the regular season on about the most upbeat note possible
via Henderson Alvarez’s no-hitter on Sunday, the Marlins still lost 100 games
for just the second time in their history, and finished dead last in the NL in
attendance. Now they’re trying to eke an additional profit out of Alvarez’s
big day.
On Monday, the Marlins announced that they will sell 9,100 unused tickets to
Sunday’s no-hitter for $15 a pop via their MLB.com site and the team store
at Marlins Park. Those unsold tickets will count as attendance and thus boost
the team beyond its official paid attendance figures of 28,315 for the day and
1,586,322 for the season, though they won’t be enough to nudge them to 14th in
the rankings or to avoid ending the season with the worst attendance drop in
the second season of a new ballpark during the Bud Selig-era building boom.
This isn’t the first time the Marlins have pulled this shenanigan either. They
sold unused tickets to Roy Halladay’s perfect game against them at Sun Life
Stadium in 2010, finding takers for 3,500 such tickets in the first five hours
they were on sale, many of them to Phillies fans. Since Sun Life had a capacity
of 75,000 for football compared to 38,560 for baseball (of which they drew
25,086) the organization was said to be offering somewhere around 40,000 extra
tickets at face value. Team president David Samson said the figures would be
reported:
“As long as tickets are available, we’ll keep selling,” Samson said.
“We’ll keep going, the same way we would for a World Series or any other
game. What we do is open up different sections.”
Because tickets for the historic night are going to continue to be sold, the
attendance figure for the game will be revised.
“It would have to be,” Samson said. “Any ticket revenue is part of revenue
sharing and part of the local revenue. So it gets reported.”
Despite Samson’s word (which ain’t worth much in the first place,
particularly when it comes to attendance ), it remains unknown how many such
tickets the Marlins sold, since box scores at Baseball-Reference.com and other
sites didn’t revise their attendance figures.
To be fair, the Marlins didn’t start this trend, which makes it possible for
after-the-fact buyers to turn a profit on the memorabilia market even if the
tickets weren’t actually used — particularly if said buyers can get those
mementos autographed. The White Sox appear to have been the first to try this
gambit following Mark Buehrle’s perfect game in 2009, and the A’s — who play
in a dual-purpose stadium with a level used only for football, as did the
Marlins before their new park opened — did so for Dallas Braden’s 2010
perfect game as well.
The Mets, who could use some spare cash as badly as the Marlins or A’s, went
about recognizing Johan Santana’s 2012 no-hitter, the first in franchise
history, in a more above-board fashion. They marketed reprinted tickets on
Season Ticket Holder stock” for $50 a pop and offered all 41,922 seats for
sale, with freebies for season-ticket holders (who were still assessed a
shipping-and-handling fee) and discount for partial-plan holders. Just under
three weeks later, The Wall Street Journal‘s Brian Costa reported that
“around 3,000 such tickets had sold, though it’s unclear if those included
the free or discounted ones.
If unused no-hitter tickets can be sold, it’s only a matter of time before
teams start doing so for other milestone events such as a player’s 3,000th
hit, 500th homer or 300th win, a four-homer game, and so on. For a price,
anyone will be able to claim “I was there” for their signature event of
choice and have the ticket, if not the memories, to back it up.
http://mlb.si.com/2013/09/30/henderson-alvarez-no-hitter-marlins-tickets/
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Loria有什么钱不赚啊....
不过他竟然不是先驱