Any sports fan knows that the location of your seat is critical to your enjoyment of the game. Every major league baseball stadium has nosebleed seats, the joke being you’re so high up that you get nosebleeds. The players look like tiny ants on the enormous field, and it’s nearly impossible to follow the action. In football, I’m often forced to watch the Jumbotron when the ball is on the east end of the field, since my seats are in the Horseshoe on the west side. It’s no wonder that seats at the 50-yard line are considered to be the ideal spot to watch a game. When you’re sitting all the way up in C-section at the Assembly Hall, so much of the game is lost to you. You see people shooting and rebounding, but you miss so much. It truly is a completely different game when you’re close to the floor. You can hear what the players are saying, and you can see plays coming before they even happen. The art in the strategy of the game is much more apparent, and you realize how incredibly gifted these athletes are. They’re so fluid that they make the game look effortless. Many people don’t realize what it takes to be a successful basketball team. You can’t just dribble the ball down the court and expect to win games. Teams have dozens of carefully timed set plays that require players to be in sync with one another. On offense, you set and receive screens and you’re in constant motion. On defense you have to lockdown on your opponents, constantly denying them the ball and impeding their progress towards the basket.
Recently, I was fortunate enough to sit in the sixth row of A-section for the game against Iowa. Normally, these tickets are unavailable, as they are only sold to the wealthy donors that support the University. However, there were tickets available there for several reasons: 1. Iowa, historically a football school, currently sits in 10th place (2nd to last in the Big Ten Conference) 2. Our basketball team has struggled mightily this year. After starting the season ranked out #16 in the nation, we’re currently unranked and just inside the bubble for the NCAA Tournament. It was surprising to me that tickets here cost only $6 more than tickets in C-section. Even though Iowa has a pitiful basketball team, I jumped at the opportunity to go to the game. I even recorded the game and saw a fuzzy shot of myself on TV!
Ticket prices for sporting events are very frustrating. If you want to attend a professional sporting event, especially the NFL, you could easily get into the $75-$100 range for just one ticket. The nice thing about sitting in the Horseshoe is that tickets cost around only $12 per game, even when we’re playing Ohio State. The University’s strategy (for basketball at least) is to make tickets pretty cheap for the students, and charge more money for everyone else. The advent of StubHub and other online ticket brokers helped make some seats more affordable, but regardless of that, tickets are generally very expensive for the general public. If we’re trying to create an intimidating atmosphere in the Assembly, we simply have to let students take over the A-section. I know that these donors give tens of thousands of dollars every year, but it’s frustrating watching other college basketball games on TV where they’re able to create an electric atmosphere by having students in lower level seats. Unfortunately, money trumps all in college athletics, so I can’t see them moving the students. I realize that tickets to games are already expensive, but just once I encourage you to splurge on some seats closer to the action. I promise, you won’t be disappointed.
Speaking of seating at sports events - you should try being in a wheelchair! Admittedly, this can be a bit hit and miss; at football games, the wheelchair seats aren't too good, but at Assembly Hall basketball games the wheelchair seats are right up next the game - without any extra cost! (And a companion gets to sit alongside too.)
ReplyDeleteYes, it definitely matters where you sit. But I think the atmosphere in most basketball stadiums is so electric that I'd rather be up in the nosebleed seats than watching the game on TV. I agree that Illinois should reserve the seats in proximity to the court for students. It's a shame they don't. I think it must create a very different atmosphere on the court.
ReplyDeleteI was also at the Illini game against Iowa. However, I was in the C section. Going to Illini games frustrates me sometimes because the stands are usually dominated by old people who don't show much heart. Thus I feel wrong when I start to get more into the game because nobody else around me is. However, I do anyways. I think we should be like the university of Pittsburgh, who has the whole A section filled with student. I think that our team would benefit from the support and it would be a better atmosphere
ReplyDeleteNice post! This year I would get basketball tickets from my dad's friend because he was disappointed in how poorly the team played this year. The seats were in B-31 and amazing, right in front of half court. I definitely agree that seating plays a huge part in the enjoyment of a sporting event.
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