
What I find weird is that matchday revenues are such a small proportion of revenue, you'd think more owners would adopt the approach that they'd rather charge less to their passionate fans and ramp up the commercial side of things.
Whats this kind of increase gonna do over a year? Stick about £5m extra in the kitty... when their losses dwarf that?... When total revenue will be over £300m. I know it all adds up but taking the piss out of loyal fans seems counter productive to me.
I haven't got a season ticket this year and I'm not arsed.
Which is why it seems counter productive to piss them off. City fans are going nuts... they protested at Arsenal last year at having to pay 62 quid and here they are now getting charged 57 by their own club. Loads are saying they'll fuck it off... and while most will continue going, why create this us and them thing?... why have your fans saying they aren't going to drink your piss at the ground on principle, when the best you can hope to achieve is the salary of one plodding squad player, in a year the TV revenues have just gone through the roof?
City can't fill their stadium even with the wealth of players they have. I can only see this reducing attendances and the prices being reduced somewhere down the line
Bayern Munich chairman on ticket prices
"We could charge more than £104. Let's say we charged £300. We'd get £2m more in income but what's £2m to us?"
"In a transfer discussion you argue about that sum for five minutes. But the difference between £104 and £300 is huge for the fan."
"We do not think the fans are like cows, who you milk. Football has got to be for everybody."
"That's the biggest difference between us and England."
Bayern Munich chairman on ticket prices
"We could charge more than £104. Let's say we charged £300. We'd get £2m more in income but what's £2m to us?"
"In a transfer discussion you argue about that sum for five minutes. But the difference between £104 and £300 is huge for the fan."
"We do not think the fans are like cows, who you milk. Football has got to be for everybody."
"That's the biggest difference between us and England."
Is it £104 for a (ridiculously cheap) season ticket or £104 for a (ridiculously expensive) match ticket?Bayern Munich chairman on ticket prices
"We could charge more than £104. Let's say we charged £300. We'd get £2m more in income but what's £2m to us?"
"In a transfer discussion you argue about that sum for five minutes. But the difference between £104 and £300 is huge for the fan."
"We do not think the fans are like cows, who you milk. Football has got to be for everybody."
"That's the biggest difference between us and England."
Is it £104 for a (ridiculously cheap) season ticket or £104 for a (ridiculously expensive) match ticket?
City can't fill their stadium even with the wealth of players they have. I can only see this reducing attendances and the prices being reduced somewhere down the line
