CJ_covblaze
Well-Known Member
Did we sell enough?
Wasn't it like 8,000 to get the first % off?
7k.
Did we sell enough?
Wasn't it like 8,000 to get the first % off?
Maybe £13 a ticket when we have got used to a lack of entertainment isn't very good value then.I personally believe that £13 a ticket is very good value. When you deduct VAT the club is getting just over a tenner.
Are they offering "pay in instalments" or a similar deal. Say, £35 a month for 10 months or whatever. I would think those living on a budget would find that more acceptable
I personally will not be renewing as I have stated since Xmas. I believe Robins will do the best possible but have had enough of Fisher and SISU and complete lack of entertainment.
Show me investment and a long term vision and I will support.
Maybe £13 a ticket when we have got used to a lack of entertainment isn't very good value then.
Maybe £13 a ticket when we have got used to a lack of entertainment isn't very good value then.
What's been said?They've already got the Coventry Observer banging this drum for them.
I think nowhere near 7000 unfortunatelyThere was always going to be a significant drop in ST sales next season due to the disused factor, performance, relegation, dispondancy, affordability, deaths etc. What Tim Fisher doesn't seem to get is the idea is to attract NEW season ticket holders always tougher than selling to long time ST holders, I doubt if there will be any newbies next season at all. We don't know what we would paying in advance to see, a lot of our current squad will be off elsewhere and have to be replaced but who with, and when, normally for us it's the week before the season starts.
Ironically though this could see a rise in match day income because I believe a lot of lapsed ST holders will go on a match by match basis paying £20+ per game instead of £13, I expect our home crowd to be similar to this season of around 7000 especially if we are doing okay league wise plus away fans.
Is Fisher thinking the same I wonder.
Controversial as this may be, I don't get the comparison to Bradford.
Whether Bradford do their tickets for £150 or more, they have a fan base. Always have, always will.
Let's say, had we reduced ours to £150, how many who aren't already ST's or how many who'd already decided not to go next season would buy? I don't think it'll make a difference imo!
The "award winning" journalist posted an opinion piece a few days ago.What's been said?
OPINION: Season ticket boycott to oust Coventry City owners is BONKERS and will fail. Time fans' 'leaders' said so
Les Reid7th Apr, 2017Updated: 8th Apr, 2017
So now we know. Coventry City ARE going to be relegated. Even the unexpected ‘miracle’ greatest of ‘great escapes’ is now all but mathematically impossible.
We also know they HAVE won silverware at Wembley for only the second time in their history in front of 43,000 Coventry City fans, highlighting the club’s ongoing size and potential.
Frustratingly, all those of us who care about the club also now know we are about to enter yet another round of intransigent and acrimonious off-field politics – FIVE years since it started – blame games and distorted nonsense which yet again is likely to get us precisely nowhere.
Those promulgating the destructive negativity will yet again achieve only half their aim.
That is, to publicise nationally that the Sky Blues is a ‘crisis club’ – which inevitably just puts off current and prospective supporters, players, managers and potential investors.
They will keep on failing to achieve their end game of a takeover, by fans or anyone else – as they have done for five years.
They will go on contributing to a multi-party political and commercial dispute which has damaged and financially distressed the club.
They will go on blaming the club and its current ‘owners’ for all ills, rather than all parties and calling on all parties for a resolution.
None of it is a recipe for turning into reality the collective hope – expressed by those inspirational 1987 FA Cup winning talismen John Sillett and Keith Houchen in this newspaper among others – that somehow, just somehow, the positive energy from that magnificent Wembley win could be a turning point towards an early promotion push from League Two, with winning games putting bums back on seats.
I won’t go into all the issues I covered in my long opinion piece last October – called ‘Lies, Boycotts and Trumpification in the Coventry City dispute’ – written as a journalist who has covered the issues since the 1990s – and intensely since 2012/3 – from the boardrooms to the court rooms, council offices to Parliament. The issues covered in that article remain entirely relevant today.
I do however want to address one prevalent sentiment and campaign tactic currently being pushed to the top of the news agenda by those one-eyed anti-Sisu campaigners and campaigning newspaper editors.
It is the idea that fans should not renew season tickets – and not attend matches – until Sisu sell.
My fellow Sky Blues fans are rightly frustrated and angry about the club’s demise and of paying to watch substandard football since being top of the league last season.
If the football is poor, fans will go to fewer games. That’s their prerogative. In fact, that’s what I as a paying fan have done for many years. It is a campaign lie to pretend all those not attending games are ‘voting with their feet’ against the current owners.
But let us call out this ‘Not One Penny More until Sisu go’ idea for what it is.
It is plain bonkers.
The opposite will almost certainly be needed for a takeover. For a willing buyer and seller, VALUE will need to be added to the club – a club which has been devalued by the agenda and all sides in the dispute for too long.
And thousands of fans know it. They do not support the distress tactics. They know it won’t work. Such opinions are expressed daily – often angrily – across internet forums and social media.
They are tired of the so-called fans’ ‘leaders’ and media editors’ distorted agenda and of national scribes’ Hollywood black-and-white narrative constructed in profound ignorance of the facts and divided fans’ opinion.
ADMINISTRATION
Not only have these usual suspects promoted to the top of the news agenda the idea of not renewing season tickets or buying tickets for Coventry City home games until Sisu go.
Worse, they have recently talked up the prospect of it being a mechanism leading to the club going into administration, which would cost the Sky Blues a hefty and disastrous League points deduction.
Administration, some fans’ ‘leaders’ have tried to tell us, could be a way of ‘the fans’ acquiring or part-acquiring the club.
Again, it is bonkers, as most fans know. Most fans do not support it.
They know Coventry City Council-backed hopes of a takeover via administration spectacularly backfired in 2013, and cost the Sky Blues’ team a crippling 20 League points. As in 2013, the Sisu group of companies remain the secured creditors.
When called out by many fans, these so-called fans’ ‘leaders’ retreat.
The so-called fans’ ‘leaders’ insist they have never urged a boycott of season ticket sales, despite talking it up. They include the less-than-measured David Johnson of Fighting The Jimmy Hill Way, whose first act as campaign leader was to produce a tasteless witch mask of Sisu’s Joy Seppala using a certain newspaper’s copyrighted picture of her.
‘Let’s Get Rid of the Wicked Witch’ went the slogan on the mask. Only a hundred or so fans held it up at the halloween fixture. It alienated many others, including female fans.
It’s time for them, and all responsible media, to end the mixed messages and to challenge any agenda which still seeks to distress the club. The club loses, not Sisu. The club must balance the books under any owner or gamble, without commercial stadium revenues beyond a paltry £75,000 last season.
It’s time for the fans’ group Sky Blue Trust leaders – who again this week released a statement mentioning fans’ acquisition through poor season ticket sales – to come out AGAINST any economic distress tactics.
If they don’t or won’t do that, it is time for them to resign.
MEDIATION AND MULTI-PARTY SOLUTION
It’s also time – as the Coventry Observer stated in an editorial two weeks ago, for fans’ groups and responsible media to consistently and persistently call for ALL sides to talk to end the dispute with a Fair Deal for Coventry City, finally, on revenues at a stadium AND a long-term academy solution.
Imagine how many more thousands of fans would have backed such a petition and campaign if similarly promoted – which could have united not divided fans. Our ‘Save Our City’ campaign has consistently and persistently called for a multi-party resolution and Fair Deal for CCFC.
Again, if the usual suspects can’t or won’t do that either, they should step aside.
A new pan-city, pan-community centreground and intelligent joint initiative with people coming together – not a failed campaign driven by hatred, commercial self-interest and distorted propaganda – will likely be needed if we want a solution to the dispute.
If you agree, get involved. Speak up. Get organised. Don’t just tweet. Don’t cower in fear of being shot down as a ‘scab’, a ‘Sisu apologist’, or someone who is blaming ‘the fans’ – as the hollow, overused and (let’s face it) pretty pathetic campaign mantras go. Those of you who have expressed similar views to ours for years ARE fans – and your voices are being ignored by the mainstream media.
Let’s not kid anyone that Coventry City Council, who sold the Ricoh Arena to Wasps, and other parties are not still playing an active part in this dispute. Just look at council leader George Duggins’ recent words. Many don’t believe, naively, that there is never political interference by local authorities in the supposedly ‘quasi judicial’ decisions taken by a few councillors in planning committee.
Many are tired of that other ‘cart before horse’ council and campaign mantra, that Sisu must drop their legal action against the Wasps deal first, before any mediation, including the current mediation process involving Chris Heaton-Harris MP reporting to sports minister Tracey Crouch. It’s not lost on many that professional mediation on a daily basis in all walks of life exists precisely to reach an END point, of court action being dropped.
Let’s have a pan-community resolution. Let’s all make it happen.
The "award winning" journalist posted an opinion piece a few days ago.
Except for the shares he has in the club.And he does it all for free what a man
Some of what he says does make sense. But the article is full of propaganda.The "award winning" journalist posted an opinion piece a few days ago.
I haven't seen anyone say that it is a bad price. It is that we have been relegated and you could end up paying more. And you have to buy before you have a clue on what our squad is going to look like or you will miss the early bird prices.FWIW, Hereford FC are charging £207 for a seating season ticket for next year, in Southern Prem.
We are comparable to the majority of League 2 clubs, and have very limited other income streams (and I am not talking about owner investment, per se)
You want a budget for Robins to spend on the team, or not?
Me. And I would miss most games.OK, simple question: How many of you would buy an ST at those prices in League 2 if SISU sold up before the start of next season?
Went and saw Cheltenham a couple of times and I agree, Division Four quality is worse than Division Three where we are now. Of course Division Four is now called Division Two and Division Three called Division One - God knows why!I haven't seen anyone say that it is a bad price. It is that we have been relegated and you could end up paying more. And you have to buy before you have a clue on what our squad is going to look like or you will miss the early bird prices.
Some people are going to be in for a shock when they see the quality of Division 4 football next season.
this makes me laugh if we get 15000 there will be 30 % discount.
"
Money Back. For the first time ever, the club has also decided to introduce a refund scheme to encourage more City supporters to sign up and back the Sky Blues for the 2016/17 season at the Ricoh Arena.
The scheme has four different sales targets, with a maximum discount of 30% and the size of the refund depending on the number of season cards sold. If the club sells over 7,000 season tickets, fans will receive a refund of 10%. If the club sells 8,500, fans will receive a refund of 15%. If the club reaches the magic mark of 10,000, fans will receive a refund of 20% and if we reach 15,000, a 30% discount will apply. If we reach the required targets, supporters will receive money back on their Season Ticket cards, which can be used for your 2017/18 Season Ticket.
For early bird purchases, the club have also decided to pay for the £6 Ticketmaster service charge of associated with buying a season ticket card.
Read more at Season Tickets"
Averaging £30 for how many tickets per game? Think your statement may be misleading some.I understand your point. However that's the going rate, it's a take it or leave it policy. Like I say I'm in based on its £16, I'd pay near that to watch non league football several leagues lower, and I paid on average £30 for my league one away games this year.
That's the only way I'm working is it reasonable or not
All of us, every man, women , child and dog would be queuing up if SISU just done the right thing and sold this club.OK, simple question: How many of you would buy an ST at those prices in League 2 if SISU sold up before the start of next season?
I think you're a mug if you buy a season ticket under sisu. They've taken us from the championship to league two, have some respect for yourself.