Quote from: Phil from the upper holte on September 14, 2010, 09:01:29 AMQuote from: dave clark five on September 14, 2010, 08:36:50 AMGeneralIt is a poor day when we have to resort to selling tickets for the Chelsea game at £15 each. That match is just over a month away. It would appear that the club have no confidence in things getting better in that period to have to resort to cheap seats for a match in the highest category of ticket pricing. Would you rather pay £40?As it happens, my seats have already been paid for so I have no say in the matter.I was pointing out what a poor state we are in when we have to resort to cheap seats a month in advance of a match against one of the top clubs in the league.If this continues then there will be fewer and fewer season ticket holders if they can pick up tickets on a match by match basis at such a price. Ticket prices like this used to apply for games like Wigan and Bolton; not Chelsea.
Quote from: dave clark five on September 14, 2010, 08:36:50 AMGeneralIt is a poor day when we have to resort to selling tickets for the Chelsea game at £15 each. That match is just over a month away. It would appear that the club have no confidence in things getting better in that period to have to resort to cheap seats for a match in the highest category of ticket pricing. Would you rather pay £40?
GeneralIt is a poor day when we have to resort to selling tickets for the Chelsea game at £15 each. That match is just over a month away. It would appear that the club have no confidence in things getting better in that period to have to resort to cheap seats for a match in the highest category of ticket pricing.
If this continues then there will be fewer and fewer season ticket holders if they can pick up tickets on a match by match basis at such a price.Spot on and I fall into this category as I'm sure plenty of others do.I must have got something wrong though as last week I paid £35.00 for my Bolton ticket and today received a post card from the club offering me a ticket for £10.00!!
For someone who walked out in such a strop as O'Neill seemed to do, he has remained very tight lipped on the whole affair. Can you shed any light on why he may have chosen to do so as presumably he would have had no compensation and, therefore, no secrecy clause.
QuoteFor someone who walked out in such a strop as O'Neill seemed to do, he has remained very tight lipped on the whole affair. Can you shed any light on why he may have chosen to do so as presumably he would have had no compensation and, therefore, no secrecy clause.DC5, I asked the very same question on this thread about 3 weeks ago.
GeneralI seem to remember that the day after MON took charge that he was straight on the touchline to manage us in a friendly in Germany