Interesting piece by David Conn, shows that it's not just us who pay too much 
for tickets

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/david-conn...l-ticket-prices

The Premier League has priced out fans, young and old
Ticket prices have soared way beyond the cumulative 77.1% inflation rate for 20 
years and excluded traditional support bases

In the 20th year since the First Division clubs broke away from the Football 
League to keep the new satellite TV fortunes and form the Premier League, money 
has transformed the game – and the price of watching it. As the gradual changes 
each season are contemplated – 6.5% increases at Arsenal this year; prices 
frozen at Stoke City, the £10 adult ticket at Blackburn Rovers – awareness 
fades of the mighty disparity between what fans pay now and the prices before 
the Premier League was formed.

In 1989-90, the year of Lord Justice Taylor's report following the Hillsborough 
disaster, in which he recommended stadiums become all seat, fans watched Alex 
Ferguson's Manchester United play the very top clubs for a cheapest price of 
£3.50. With cumulative inflation of 77.1% since, according to the Bank of 
England, United supporters who stood on the Stretford End or United Road 
terraces then would now pay an equivalent £6.20 to watch Ferguson's Premier 
League champions. But the cheapest ticket at all-seat Old Trafford this season 
is £28, lower than at other top clubs yet still representing inflation of 700%. 
Mostly, United's prices are higher; the £28 seats are available only in the 
lower tiers of the East and West Stands, not in swathes as they were across the 
terraces of old.

Matches against the clubs in Arsenal's current category A price, Chelsea, 
Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, Manchester United and Manchester City, could be 
watched in 1989-90, on the North Bank at Highbury, for £5. Now, at the 
60,000-seat Emirates Stadium, which is becoming noted for high prices and 
including English football's first £100 seat, the cheapest ticket for a 
category A game is £51. That represents inflation, since the Taylor Report, of 
920%.

After the wreckage of Hillsborough, the Football Supporters' Association argued 
against all-seat stadiums, principally because it believed clubs would use them 
as a platform to raise ticket prices. When addressing and rejecting that 
argument, Taylor famously wrote in his report: "Clubs may well wish to charge 
somewhat more for seats than for standing but it should be possible to plan a 
price structure which suits the cheapest seats to the pockets of those 
presently paying to stand."

The judge cited a price of £6 for seating at Ibrox Park, quaint compared to the 
prices now at the grounds, rebuilt according to Taylor's recommendations and 
which formed the foundation for football's revival. "I do not think Taylor saw 
the commercial revolution around the corner, beginning with the increase of 
television money," Rogan Taylor, chair of the FSA then, now director of 
Liverpool University's football industries group, says.

"Of course, the grounds have improved out of all recognition, but the ticket 
price increases have not mostly been necessary to pay for that – they are now 
going into the arms race of escalating players' wages. When I go to Liverpool 
now [cheapest adult price £45 for category A matches compared to £4 in 1989-90] 
I don't mostly see a bourgeois, middle-class crowd, but ordinary people who 
must be stretching to afford it. And the two groups who were clearly excluded 
when the prices went up were older people who had stuck with the game through 
some terrible times, and young people."

For all the game's problems in the 1980s, watching football was a rite of 
passage in which children, mostly boys, graduated from being taken to matches, 
to watching as young men, with very few excluded because it cost too much.

The figures from 1989-90, collated for the Labour government's Football Task 
Force, show the cheapest season ticket at Anfield was just £60 and £96 at 
United – the equivalent prices with inflation would be £106 and £170 now – but 
the actual lowest-priced season tickets this season are £725 at Liverpool and 
£532 at Old Trafford (1,108% and 454% inflation respectively).

Clubs were usually neither sophisticated nor commercial enough then to conduct 
demographic analysis of their own supporters, but the memory and images of 
young people at grounds are borne out by research done at the time by Leicester 
University's Sir Norman Chester Centre. Surveys of fans were carried out for 
Coventry City, in the old First Division, finding in 1983 that 22% of 
supporters were aged 16-20. At Aston Villa in 1992, 25% of the crowd was 16-20; 
at Arsenal, 17% of fans were 16-20.

Premier League surveys for years show a consistent reduction in the proportion 
of young people, who pay full price from 16. By 2006-07 the proportion of fans 
aged 16-24 was 9%; in 2007-08, the figure was 11%. Last season it bounced back 
to 19%, which the Premier League said was due to improvements in the way its 
survey is carried out.

According to the Premier League's research, 13% of season-ticket holders are 
under 16 and the average age of an adult supporter is 41 – the core whose 
loyalty was nurtured when attending games was affordable to almost all.

"We must accept that some people feel they are excluded because they cannot 
afford the prices," the Premier League's spokesman, Dan Johnson, acknowledged. 
"But many clubs work hard to attract fans with affordable deals, and there are 
different opportunities to attend.

"Twenty years ago many people were excluded for different reasons: the 
atmosphere was hostile and many grounds inadequate. We argue the experience has 
improved enormously, crowds have increased hugely, and a wider section of 
society feel comfortable coming to football."

Crowds do remain at historic highs. The average Old Trafford attendance last 
season was 74,864, just below United's 75,769 capacity, while at the Emirates 
Arsenal played to crowds averaging 59,930, nudging full houses of 60,361. 
Overall, Premier League grounds were full to 92% of capacity, down from a high 
of 94% in 2005 06.

Clubs in poorer, northern areas, including Bolton, Blackburn and Wigan, are 
working hardest to maintain crowds, so offering the cheapest deals. In this 
recession, though, the top clubs cannot assume fans will keep paying a large 
slice of their incomes on expensively priced football tickets either. On 
Tuesday, more than 4,000 Old Trafford tickets remained on sale for United's 
match on Monday against Spurs. After years of sell-outs United – since their 
US-based owners, the Glazers, began to raise ticket prices – have not been 
guaranteed to fill the ground.

"Some Premier League clubs do offer good deals," says Malcolm Clarke, chair of 
the Football Supporters' Federation, "but the prices at top clubs, and 
particularly London clubs, are mostly outrageous. They are beyond the reach of 
many younger people who used to have access to football, and now, if they are 
interested, they are watching the game in the pub.

"Football, by tradition, was always accessible to almost everybody, and in the 
current economic climate, with jobs and standards of living under threat, there 
is a great danger an increasing section of the community will be priced out."

Football's glittering success since the Premier League was formed tells a 
contradictory story: the clubs operate well-respected community programmes 
aimed at "social inclusion" for young people in their neighbourhoods – while 
mostly pricing them out of going to matches.


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