Bale injured in warm up before home debut.
who's been sticking pins into a homemade Gareth bale doll?.....
Who hasn't might be a better question

Bale injured in warm up before home debut.
who's been sticking pins into a homemade Gareth bale doll?.....

Bale injured in warm up before home debut.
who's been sticking pins into a homemade Gareth bale doll?.....
Who hasn't might be a better question![]()
Vertonghen simultaneously watches our win over Cardiff and Ajax getting a battering by PSV:
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Ended up 4-0, with ex-Man Utd and current QPR loanee Park Ji-Sung getting the last goal.
Losing Eriksen's been a big blow to Ajax, by all accounts. Understandable.
http://metro.co.uk/2013/09/24/totte...-touting-as-chelsea-tickets-hit-1265-4094562/
Spurcat called it right, it was only a matter of time until it blew up.
Apparently this is from our own website: "The club does not benefit financially from sales on the site and StubHub only receives commission on tickets sold – there is no fee to list.". Now surely it would be better if there was a fee to list and no commission, that way those selling tickets would be forced to put a realistic price or waste their money. It's a **** company to work with anyway so lets hope they do away with them completely.
Chelsea, Everton and Man City all have deals in place with StubHub - the difference is they cap the price that tickets can be sold at, whilst we had people asking for several hundred quid for tickets to the Swansea match.
Surely if people don't pay, the problem will go away. If anyone is daft enough to pay £1200 for a game of football, then why not? As long as the people selling are season ticket holders, and not touts.
Surely if people don't pay, the problem will go away. If anyone is daft enough to pay £1200 for a game of football, then why not? As long as the people selling are season ticket holders, and not touts.
Well said SD, it's supply and demand, if people are daft enough to pay silly money for what is usually a poor atmosphere and dispiriting experience, good luck to them. Maybe they'll get behind the team more than the 'regulars' they're replacing. In my experience at the Lane over the last 5 or so years, it won't be difficult.
If we had a crowd that got behind the team properly, then i'd be all against Stub Hub, but ATM, I couldn't care less.
Watch the game down the pub if you want some atmosphere, don't waste it on Stub Hub. I prefer watching us at home to being at the ground these days, I can sing and shout all I want, try doing that at Spurs these days. You're seen as some kind of lunatic in most parts of the ground (I do admit I am a bit of a lunatic BTW
Maybe, if we ever get this new stadium, we'll get some proper atmosphere back at the Lane, and the Stub Hub situation wiill look different. I doubt it though. The club are out to kill atmosphere by their policies, so can't see anything changing.
Oh and selling the last ticket or two for thousands of times the value of the ticket is not "supply and demand", it's out and out exploitation.
Well said SD, it's supply and demand, if people are daft enough to pay silly money for what is usually a poor atmosphere and dispiriting experience, good luck to them. Maybe they'll get behind the team more than the 'regulars' they're replacing. In my experience at the Lane over the last 5 or so years, it won't be difficult.
If we had a crowd that got behind the team properly, then i'd be all against Stub Hub, but ATM, I couldn't care less.
Watch the game down the pub if you want some atmosphere, don't waste it on Stub Hub. I prefer watching us at home to being at the ground these days, I can sing and shout all I want, try doing that at Spurs these days. You're seen as some kind of lunatic in most parts of the ground (I do admit I am a bit of a lunatic BTW
Maybe, if we ever get this new stadium, we'll get some proper atmosphere back at the Lane, and the Stub Hub situation wiill look different. I doubt it though. The clubs, the government(s), the football authorities are out to kill atmosphere by their policies, so can't see anything changing much.

Totally disagree. Just because you want something it doesn't mean you should be held by your ankles and shook upside down until they've got every penny out of you.
It's disgusting that people are being allowed to legally tout tickets.
While I agree that it is exploitation, it is also supply and demand. One of the things that always confuses me is that almost everyone in the country votes for political parties that support naked capitalism and anyone who argues against that is called a looney. But as soon as naked capitalism is applied to anything they actually care about they are up in arms. Not a criticism of you YV, just a generalisation.
Incidentally this has been legal for Wimbledon debenture tickets for years, but it is not allowed for Wimbledon ballot tickets or Club Wembley tickets - these you are not allowed to sell on except via the Club Wembley web-site which restricts the price you can charge.
Men's final debenture tickets at Wimbledon were going at more than £5,000 last time I looked. I've seen a serious argument that Wimbledon should price the tickets currently sold in the ballot at 'what the market will bear' on the grounds that this would raise more money to develop British tennis.
Don't get me wrong, I don't like the system (and I have enjoyed the atmosphere at the Lane, the last few times I've been btw) but the quickest way to end the exploitation is for people to simply ignore silly prices. If people won't pay them, then the practice will stop. Maybe I am missing something and there is something more sinister happening, but if I could buy a season ticket and then get the whole cost covered by one rich idiot and forego just one game, it would be very tempting. Ticket prices are already out of the range of many supporters.
The economics text books always allow for rare resources to be sold at hefty prices. Just to be clear I agree with you that this shouldn't be allowed - I was simply musing that people should take notice that if 'the market' gives such silly results in such an unimportant matter as football tickets, then may be it isn't the right answer for important stuff either.Sorry but it's not. Supply and demand is a macro concept. Touts pick up a handful of tickets during the inital spike of demand and then releasing this far smaller amount of tickets at many times the initial market value of the ticket. It can only ever be a small scale business, if you took it from micro to macro(say buying half the tickets in the ground) then it wouldn't have the same effect. It also involves deliberately manipulating the supply, which is not what supply and demand is about.
I'm not so sure about the lesson though, you might be making a few assumptions about me there. As for the Wimbledon bit depends how wrong you think touting is, if I mugged a granny but gave the money to charity then I've still committed a crime.
The economics text books always allow for rare resources to be sold at hefty prices. Just to be clear I agree with you that this shouldn't be allowed - I was simply musing that people should take notice that if 'the market' gives such silly results in such an unimportant matter as football tickets, then may be it isn't the right answer for important stuff either.
