top of page

Gardening Chat

Public·28 members

Easton Nguyen
Easton Nguyen

Where Can I Buy Super Bowl Tickets For 2015 __EXCLUSIVE__


The 70,288 tickets that were initially released for the 2015 game between the Seahawks and the Patriots had originally been distributed according to the following equation: 17.5% each to the competing teams, 5% to the team of the host city (Glendale, Arizona), 34.8% split between the remaining teams in the league, and the remaining 25.2% to members of the media, fans, and NFL sponsors.




where can i buy super bowl tickets for 2015



Spectators paid some big bucks to see the 2015 Super Bowl in person. The highest priced tickets that were for seats in the lower center of the stadium were listed for around $17,800 each, while the cheap seats were available from $1,857. Those with serious cash to splash spent between $726,000 and $1,000,000 on luxury suites.


Of all the tickets available on NFL Ticket Exchange the week before the 2015 Super Bowl final, just 38 were under $9,000. By that point, the prices had climbed so high that the majority of fans no longer had any chance whatsoever of grabbing a seat at the game.


The StubHub home page prominently reads, "No surprise fees. Only good surprises." Anyone venturing to the fan-to-fan ticket marketplace owned by eBay in search of 2015 Super Bowl tickets on the day of the game will be surprised, but it is impossible to classify the shock as being anywhere close to being "good." With only seven hours to kickoff between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX, the cheapest available ticket was priced at $11,246.50. Paying that price would get a fan one seat in Row 10 of Upper Sideline 449 at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.


More people bought Super Bowl tickets a month out from game day this year than any other year since 2015. Check out the chart below for a comparison of how many tickets were sold leading up to the Super Bowl over the last five years.


MALONE: Now, there are two kinds of ticket brokers. First, there are the ones who know what they're doing. They sell you a ticket. And they know exactly where it's going to come from. They know a guy whose company somehow gets tickets. And there's going to be an extra one. And that's the ticket the broker is selling you.


KING: So what he's saying is Brett knew that some of the people who sold tickets early on for like two grand on his website, they did not have a clue where those tickets were going to come from. They assumed, just like every year, that they'd buy them during the last-minute dip. But now there was no dipping. There was just spiking.


When the 2015 ticket bubble burst, there were a lot of pissed-off people. They had paid for hotels. They had booked airline tickets. Some of them had already shown up to Arizona. And a lot of those pissed-off people got in touch with a man named Bob Ferguson.


MALONE: He's a huge fan and was actually at the 2015 Super Bowl. His tickets worked out fine. But outside of the stadium, he kept running into devastated fan after devastated fan. Bob eventually went after a particularly egregious ticket broker who wasn't even reimbursing people when their tickets fell through.


Backed by parent company eBay, StubHub ponied up what it had to pay to fulfill its guarantee that if a seller doesn't come through with a ticket, the site will offer a replacement. Spokesman Glenn Lehrman said there were a couple hundred cases where this occurred and everyone will have tickets.


Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich told ESPN.com that, at least right now, it looks like "a civil matter where there might be damages between the patron and person who sold them the tickets," but Brnovich said that his office wouldn't have jurisdiction unless it could be proven that a certain company had a habitual record of fraudulent activity.


The ticket fiasco led to a concerted effort by the NFL to control more tickets and how they are distributed, leading to large price jumps. Before 2015, the cheapest Super Bowl ticket prices generally were a few thousand dollars (the lone exception was the 2011 contest between the Packers and Steelers, a glamor pairing). But go back to the 2008 title game in Arizona and get-in prices were less than $1,000 on game day.


The NFL moved to clean up the market after 2015, ensuring more tickets went to its affiliate On Location, which packages Super Bowl tickets with hotels and experiences. On Location is now owned by Endeavor, but the NFL grants a license to the company for Super Bowl tickets.


"Super Bowl tickets are often one of the most in-demand live event tickets of the year," Leyden said. "It is still the biggest sporting event in the country, and there are only so many seats in the stadium. This imbalance of supply and demand is what causes prices to be where they are."


Understandably, the trajectory and peak for pricing is a little different every year, depending on which teams are squaring off and where the game is being played. Projections for the 2015 Super Bowl's ticket prices called for seats to be less expensive than usual, supposedly because of "fatigue" among fans of the two teams in the game, the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks, who have both played and won it all over the past decade.


At the start of this week, the explanation for the unexpected rise in prices was that many brokers had been "short-selling" tickets, based on the assumption that the previously established pattern would hold true and prices would fall as Super Bowl Sunday neared. To short-sell tickets, "a broker typically lists tickets in a generic section of the stadium and doesn't disclose exactly where the seats are until the Wednesday before the game," as a post by ESPN's Darren Rovell explained. "The idea for the brokers is to take money from ticket buyers when the tickets are at a higher price after the conference title games, then actually buy the tickets days later as the prices start to come down."


The price of Super Bowl tickets often fluctuates drastically based on the game's location, the matchup, seat location, and date of purchase. Generally, the historical cost of the average super bowl resale ticket has ranged between $4,000 and $6,000.


Historically prices have dropped in the weeks between the conference championship games and the Super Bowl, save for 2015 when the prices increased by 57 percent (Patriots vs. Seahawks). Last year, there was a 25 percent decrease after when the Broncos and Panthers made their way to SB50, so it will be interesting to see where this year ends up. 041b061a72


About

Welcome to the group! You can connect with other members, ge...
  • Facebook - Black Circle
  • Twitter - Black Circle
  • Pinterest - Black Circle

© 2023 by T-MARKET. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page