Charles Green really isn't easy to like, is he?
All his s***-stirring, all the "agenda" this, and "bigoted" that, are clearly desperate attempts to play to the gallery - and his metamorphosis in the eyes of Rangers fans from Pope-Worshipper to True Billy Boy Bluenose status in the matter of a few weeks suggests he is succeeding.
For example, he gave a speech to the fans before Rangers' first home game of the season, raucously received, where he mockingly contrasted the huge Ibrox attendance with the anticlimax that was the SPL's Sellout Saturday. It wasn't classy, it wasn't clever, but it wasn't an unreasonable comparison either.
Sellout Saturday was an anticlimax - nay, an embarrassment - everywhere but Aberdeen, where 14,000 dragged themselves to Pittodrie to watch a clash with Ross County. An impressive, entertaining Dons win might have led to some better-late-than-never season ticket sales, or at least encouraged some of these Fair Weather Fans to come back. Unfortunately for them, it was a day where Scott Vernon left his shooting boots at home, and when the County goal appeared to have some sort of ball-reperlling forcefield around it. The resultant goalless draw suggests that Aberdeen will look back on Sellout Saturday as a missed opportunity.
But at least there was some interest. Contrast it with the first Inverness home game of the season, against Kilmarnock. The attendance, in a stadium that holds 7,500 fans at full capacity?
3,012.
That is lower than any home gate at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium in the league for the whole of last season.
Yes, the away support was rubbish (in number - they made a decent noise) - less than 200 in my book. But the home end was filled with wide-open spaces that you could have sat a herd of elephants in. Inverness play Celtic this weekend - last season raised the alarming spectacle of empty seats in the home end even when we played the Old Firm, something that was unthinkable in previous years.
Inverness aren't the only ones who are struggling to attract fans - attendances at most clubs are not heading in the right direction. I'm going to look at the reasons why ICT can't bring fans through the door, but plenty of these apply to other clubs too.
THE COST
A ticket in the main stand at Inverness for a home game against another 'diddy team' - £26
A ticket in the away end at Tynecastle (I couldn't be assed going in the end) - £25
A ticket at the halfway line, three rows from the front at the DW Stadium to watch Wigan play Chelsea, with Hazard, Torres, Cole, Terry and several other international stars on display - £22
Being royally ripped off to watch football in Scotland - priceless
For a season ticket holder like me, the value is better, but in the current climate £350 is a lot of money to fork out. In contrast, you can sit in a pub and watch a game on the TV for the price of a pint or two. Or buy an "All-you-can-watch" cinema ticket for £15 a month.
The solution? For goodness sake, make it cheaper. I know Motherwell's experiment with low ticket prices a few years back failed, but £26 for ICT-Kilmarnock?! You'd have to be a nutter to pay that (he says without a trace of irony). Once you price fans out of football, they find other ways to spend their money, and they won't come back. It's got to be better in the long run to fill the stadium.
THE QUALITY OF THE SHOW
Oh for the days when our league contained world-class players...Laudrup, Larsson, the De Boer twins, Nakamura (maybe not world-class, but damn good). Aberdeen were spending stupid money on guys like Paul Bernard and Robbie Winters, Motherwell were forking out for John Spencer...now, apart from the occasional tiny payment, no club other than Celtic in the SPL can afford to pay a transfer fee, and our clubs are less attractive to a lot of players than League One and League Two in England. So the standard has slumped through the door - but if there's less money flying around then that can't be helped. I'm also fond of pointing out that top players do not necessarily guarantee you an exciting game.
But the games themselves are not much to shout about. For a lot of teams, a draw at home is a decent result. Some sides like Kilmarnock, Dundee Utd and St. Mirren, at least try to play good football - though that doesn't seem to boost attendances. But Inverness spent last season playing hoof-ball. Our 19 home games produced only 46 goals (the lowest at any ground in the league), only 19 of which were by us (the second fewest, behind Hibs). I know plenty of supporters who have been turned off completely by last year's dross. And, to cap it all, we have to sit down and behave like good little schoolchildren, otherwise some fascist stewards will drag you out at the first opportunity. After all, in blazing sunshine at the ICT-Killie game, there were countless stories of parents having bottles of water, taken along for their children's benefit, removed because they might be used as a weapon. This despite the fact that there was nowhere at the ground where you could get a drink of water...
The solution? I'd like to think that, if the games were good to watch, it might attract more spectators...but I don't know if that's true. It probably depends on whether the team is winning or not. Which leads me to my next point...
RESULTS
Inverness' home record in 2011/12 - won 5, drawn 5, lost 9, goals for 19, goals against 27
Seven times we were shut out, five times we scored once, and seven times we scored twice. We haven't scored three or more in a home game since March 2011. And only 7 of those 19 games had three or more goals in them. So we don't win much, and we don't score much, and we don't let the other team score much either. It's more boring than sitting through an entire episode of Question Time.
The solution? Well, the romantics amongst our support long for the Steve Paterson days, where we played 3-5-2 with wingers instead of wing-backs, where our home games seemed to produce either a 4-0 win or a 4-3 defeat. On the other hand, we coudln't get out of the first division when we played like that. And our attendances were even lower then. But I live in hope that, this season, are primary tactic won't be long balls aimed at the head of a 5ft 8in striker.
THE MONOTONY
Last season we played Dunfermline six times in all competitions. Enough said. We play the same teams again...and again...and again...
The solution? At least this season we have Highland derbies, which surely, surely will sell out. If they don't, then there is no hope. And maybe the spectre of league reconstruction will become a reality and this problem will be fixed. Maybe.
THE ROSS COUNTY FACTOR
Are some of our 'fans' defecting across the Kessock Bridge, taking advantage of the novelty factor that comes with the Staggies' promotion to the top flight? I'm not convinced, personally. But there have been rumours...
The solution? Finish above County in the league. Play better football. Simple as that.
THE RANGERS FACTOR
This was clearly a reason for slow season ticket sales at the start of the summer, and ICT's chairman made some very ill-advised comments to the press that probably haven't helped. But there have been an awful lot of supporters who announced proudly that they would renew as soon as 'justice was done' and haven't kept their word. Meanwhile, there is a large contingent of our support who saw the Gers as their Big Team - have they been turned off by not being able to see them twice a year?
The solution? Too late, the boat has sailed on this one.
CONCLUSION
One friend on twitter summed up the problem succinctly - "high price + rubbish product = low attendance". Those are undoubtedly the major factors apply to plenty other SPL clubs, even if a few of the above reasons are unique to football in the Highlands. The bottom line for me is that clubs seem to expect their supporters to turn up, rain or shine, win or lose, whether the team play like Barcelona or park the bus. It's simply not good value entertainment, and hasn't been for a long while. And the clubs still seem to be sticking their heads in the sand, ignoring all those who are drifting away from their grounds.
L.
Part of the problem seems to me to be the antiquated commercial approach of most football teams in Britain. Nothing new in that, of course. It's the same thinking that kept using facilities that were spartan, crumbling, and downright dangerous - until enough lives had been lost to force change.
ReplyDeleteNow they're no longer risking the lives of supporters, they're risking the very existence of their clubs. The basic problem is that they think purely in terms of turnstile money, the same as they did a hundred years ago. (And of course, TV money, which is even lazier thinking.) A whole possible avenue of income is being neglected, in the shape of concessions. I live in America now, and occasionally attend baseball games (the Washington Nationals). We can buy grandstand tickets for $5 (£3.16) at the gate, if they haven't all sold. If not, average ticket prices in MLB are just $26.92 (£17). Bear in mind this is for a top national league in one of the richest and largest countries in the world.
Once through the gates, we are confronted by a whole world of entertainment possibilities. There is a children's playpark area, multiple shops (including a Build-a-Bear workshop to make your own mascot), mascot meet-and-greets, and more concessions than you can shake a stick at. There is a sit-down restaurant and bar, and if I count correctly, 33 other types of concessions, including beer stands, lemonade stands, ice cream parlours, chile restaurants, hot dog stands, pizza, burgers, etc etc.
In other words, a trip to a ballgame needn't be just a sports event - it can also be a fund day out for the whole family. In Scottish football (and I can only speak for Parkhead, Hampden, and Firhill here), the only product on offer is the football (and often a poor product at that). For concessions, there are barely edible pies and burgers, Mars bars and cups of tea.
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ReplyDeleteThe arithmetic is pretty simple. If you charge £20 a ticket and get 5,000 fans in, you make £100,000 (obviously leaving aside overheads for the moment). Maybe they each spend £10 on food and a programme. Another £50,000. Total income £150,000. If you are able to charge £10 a ticket, you might get (say) 8,000 fans, totalling £80,000 in ticket income. Concessions give you another £80,000. Total income £160,000. Charge less, get more people in, sell them more pennants, stickers, programmes, shirts, programmes, hats, and scarves, not to mention all the food and drink. Offer better food and drink, and more retail options, and they might spend even more.
Not only that, but the promotional measures used by Scottish teams are sub-standard. At Nationals Park this season, there are dozens of special promotions and giveaways. The other day it was two-for-one on hotdogs and sodas. A few days before that, there was a free cap giveaway for the first 10,000 fans. There are days when kids get to go on the field and run the bases after the game. There are other giveaways, of t-shirts, novelty toys, and caps. These promotions are usually sponsored by local businesses. There are family fun packs, also sponsored, where you buy your ticket as part of a package including food and drink.
Advertising is another area where Scottish teams struggle. Really, the solution seems simple to me. Reduce ticket prices. Increase the quality and range of food and drink on offer. Have more entertainment at half-time and prematch. Have more kid-friendly initiatives, including getting to meet the players at the pitch-side. (Perhaps build a childrens play area - this would be easy for the SPL and SFL teams with smaller stadiums, often with only one or two stands. Plenty of space for a few slides and a bouncy castle.) Advertise your games (and ticket prices) on radio, tv, and in every form of print around the area - advertise it as a day out for all the family, and throw in some promotional giveaways, a grand raffle, whatever. Offer family ticket deals. Perhaps allow children accompanied by an adult in for free. Every kid will bring an adult in with them, and they'll all consume plenty from the concessions (the kids probably even more likely than the adults). Offer special pricing for students, unemployed, military, police, OAPs, etc. Allow deals for two games, or five games, purchased as one package.
Above all, remember that you have to appeal to the customer. You're not competing with the Old Firm, or the English games on TV, you're competing with these things AND the local cinema, the local shopping mall, whatever is on TV, whatever restaurants and pubs and heritage sites are in the immediate area. Football is merely one entertainment option among many, and if it doesn't try to entertain (and I don't mean on the field), then it'll lose.