A timely thread. As a season ticket holder for many years, living in London meant that I was able to attend a large proportion of away games without the hassle of a whole day devoted to home games. Hammers, Spurs, Palace, Charlton (a while ago now), Chelsea, Fulham, Arsenal, were all regulars, until I was obliged to miss a few due to circumstances beyond my control and since then have simply not had a look in. The result is I've never been to the new Spurs ground (would love to), nor the West Ham ground (not so keen) and am denied on average five or six away games a season, on my doorstep. This is something the club should look into in order to give devoted fans (myself included) a fair crack at securing a ticket.
Quote from: martyn ellis on July 18, 2022, 01:16:59 PMA timely thread. As a season ticket holder for many years, living in London meant that I was able to attend a large proportion of away games without the hassle of a whole day devoted to home games. Hammers, Spurs, Palace, Charlton (a while ago now), Chelsea, Fulham, Arsenal, were all regulars, until I was obliged to miss a few due to circumstances beyond my control and since then have simply not had a look in. The result is I've never been to the new Spurs ground (would love to), nor the West Ham ground (not so keen) and am denied on average five or six away games a season, on my doorstep. This is something the club should look into in order to give devoted fans (myself included) a fair crack at securing a ticket.Just join the lions club, they have a reserved allocation and you’ll get to at least one of them
I found this very interesting as I hadn't realised they publish this information;https://tickets.avfc.co.uk/usercontent/documents/pdf/A2223%20Bournemouth%20Info.pdfYou can see the number of us who qualify for each category. So 2,404 fans have 18 or more away game credits for last season. I suspect that would take up the majority of tickets for most games.
I think those figure are a total i.e. 600 have been to every game and then 1804 are in the next group, including the 600. Therefore 3158 went to 6+ aways last season. That shows the closed shop it is.
One of the issues that nobody seems to have touched on yet is the £30 price cap is actually self defeating in some ways.It means that clubs have no incentive to increase the size of the away allocation, as they can sell the seats to their own fans at whatever price they like. On top of this, it keeps the tickets to a price that people are happy to 'eat' the ticket to keep their booking history up. I think the solution would be similar to what I've seen at twickenham and at concerts, your ticket is a QR code which refreshes every 15 seconds. You can't screenshot or transfer it, unless through the App (presumably the App owner can block a transfer). That way you can also track if people aren't actually using the tickets. Of course, this would require each team to agree on a unified ticketing system for away tickets, but would solve many of the problems listed here.