Author Topic: Saints selling tickets fast in San Antonio  (Read 1226 times)

Offline SPURSX3

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Saints selling tickets fast in San Antonio
« on: September 14, 2005, 02:11:35 PM »
I have always said we could support the NFL here, they just never gave us a REAL chance - nobody cares about sub par leagues or pre-season games - look at the Spurs, nobody goes to pre-season then either.  but we are really doing well since tickets started selling this morning, got mine for the Atlanta game on Oct 16.  Would have bought the three game pack - but apperantly they are not going to sell it now because seats have been snatched up so fast...incredible.  I think we will sell out these games.  There are still a few thousand that have to be reserved in case any N.O. season ticket holders want to come down and switch out there tickets, but if they dont arrange to do that the seats will be sold 10 days prior to the game date.  Can't wait, been wanting to see some NFL played in SA for ages now.

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Hundreds gather for Saints tickets
Web Posted: 09/14/2005 02:10 PM CDT

Tom Orsborn and Tim Griffin
San Antonio Express-News


Hundreds of football fans, many of them irritated by long lines and rumors of ticket gorging by brokers, congregated outside the Alamodome today as tickets to three New Orleans Saints games went on sale.

Early reports from Saints officials and local ticket brokers indicated an exceptionally strong response on the first day of ticket sales to three Saints games booked for the Alamodome: Oct. 2 against Buffalo, Oct. 16 against Atlanta and Dec. 24 against Detroit.

Morning sales were slowed by computer problems and by confusion over what kind of seats were available for sale. One immediate headache: the Saints’ commitment to their season-ticket holders, a group that has claim to about 32,000 tickets that were originally stamped for games in the Louisiana Superdome.

Team officials say they are obligated to hold comparable seats in the Alamodome for those season-ticket holders, and will continue to do so until 10 days prior to each game.

If a season-ticket holder does not make arrangements to claim his seats, those tickets will be presented for general sale, Saints officials said.

The Alamodome seats 65,000.

Many fans who showed up early eager to buy tickets were told that only seats in remote sections of the Alamodome would be available today. A strong response by local corporations to pre-sale offers of tickets was also reported.

Rene Wise, a 26-year-old car salesman, claimed to be first in line. Wise, who said he arrived at 3:30 a.m., found that the honor wasn’t all he thought it would be.
While waiting for the ticket window to open, Wise was bombarded with shouts of “scalpers suck”from people behind him in line.

“I’m sorry, but I’m trying to take care of my family,” Wise shot back.

He ended up spending $560 for eight tickets to the Christmas Eve game against Detroit. Wise said he had hoped to buy eight tickets for all three games, but limited availability of good seats prompted him to change his plans.

“I’m sick and tired of this,” Wise said while in line. “I’m going to go home before I say something I regret to these people. I don’t mind waiting for tickets. I’m just tired of the people behind me. I’m not going to wait eight hours to be stuck in nosebleed seats. Those will be available at the game.”

Other fans could barely contain their excitement.
Roland Trevino, a 31-year-old building engineer, bought nine tickets to the Alamodome opener against Buffalo.

““I just want to be in the house for the first NFL game in San Antonio history,” Trevino said. “We’re fired up about it. Just to be in the house rooting on a team will be great. Hopefully, it will someday be San Antonio’s team.”

Terry Flores, 53, went to the Alamodome to buy tickets for the Oct 2 game for her husband, Raymond Flores, a contractor for Halliburton who has spent the past two years in Iraq. Flores said her husband will return home at the end of the month and go back in early October.

The Oct. 2 game, she said, is the only one he’ll be able to attend.

“He’s very excited about it,” she said.

Anthony Jaramillo, a USAA employee, claimed to be the Saints’ first Alamodome tailgater. He showed up with a Radio Flyer ago. In the wagon was a boom box and an ice chest. In the ice chest were two cases of beer.
“Rock and roll, San Antonio Saints, baby!” he yelled. “If I can’t get tickets, I’m still going to have a party.”

Jaramillo said his dream is to see NFL football permanently in the Alamo City.

“Now we have a chance,” he said. “None of this CFL stuff..”

San Antonio was home to a Canadian Football League team, the Texans, for the 1995 season.

Two local ticket brokers denied doing anything out of the ordinary.
Jerome Cohen, owner of Best Tickets, said that brokers, too, were overwhelmed by the early ticket rush.

“Demand has been very, very brisk,” Cohen said. “We have all ten ticket lines going. It’s been crazy here. I know some of our customers have gotten busy signals, it's been so busy."

Cohen had he got a jump on the situation because he has maintained a stash of Saints season tickets ­­for games in New Orleans.

“We already carried the season tickets,” he said, “so it’s old hat for us.”

Cohen’s said is price range for individual tickets runs from $39 to $250 per game. Face value for tickets ranges from $30 to $125.

Cohen said the current sales situation provides unique challenges for sellers and the Saints.

“You can’t compare this to anything we’ve ever done,” he said. “They are doing something here that takes an entire season and compressing it into two weeks. Usually, they start selling tickets the day after their previous regular season ends. Their business has got to be brisk. They have to sell 65,000 seats in two weeks."

John Binder, owner of Awesome Tickets, also reported a heavy demand for tickets.

““Business has been pretty good for us,” he said. “Our phones have been ringing off the hook since the announcement. We’re getting calls from Austin, Corpus Christi, Laredo, the Valley.”

Binder said that many of his customers expressed disappointment in the availability of choice seats. He said it was a “logistics nightmare” because the Saints had to set aside seats for current season-ticket holders.

“I’m getting a lot of disappointed callers,” he said. “One told me he got through at 10 a.m. and the best he could get were upper-level end-zone seats.” Binder, whose price range is $60 to $300 per ticket, said he expect availability to improve when the Saints get a better handle on how many season-ticket holders will be using their tickets.

“A lot of people thought they could get good tickets today and weren’t satisfied,” he said.

Binder said he expects the strong demand for tickets to hold up.

““I think it will be excellent,” he said. “I forsee they will have sellouts. I think this is the one sport in San Antonio that the city could really support because of the economics. You only have 10 games and an average cost of $75 per game. Normal working people could afford to go to these games.” Said Cohen: “There will be complete capacity for all games. I don’t have any doubt for that, even the Christmas Eve game. San Antonio is an NFL town and this opportunity fits hand in hand with what people have been dreaming about."

Cohen said he thinks interest in the Saints will eventually erode the strong local interest in the Dallas Cowboys.

“I think if this will hurt anybody, it will be the Cowboys,” Cohen said. “Especially their Oct. 16 game against the New York Giants. I think people might be interested in staying here for that week.”

Cohen said of outpouring of interest in the Saints is because of the hurricane disaster that forced the team to leave New Orleans.

“Fans are coming out in support and sympathy for the Saints,” he said. “Who doesn’t love them after what happened?”

The Saints’ Oct. 2 game against Buffalo will be the first regular-season NFL game ever held in San Antonio.

“I just think people are excited to have meaningful, regular-season football games in the Alamodome,” Binder said. “They have to play somewhere.”
 
On the set of Walker Texas Ranger Chuck Norris brought a dying lamb back to life by nuzzling it with his beard. As the onlookers gathered, the lamb sprang to life. Chuck Norris then roundhouse kicked it, killing it instantly. The lesson? The good Chuck giveth, and the good Chuck, he taketh away.

rickortreat

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Saints selling tickets fast in San Antonio
« Reply #1 on: September 14, 2005, 03:37:06 PM »
Tejas is a football crazy state and San Antonio deserves a NFL team.  The support the Saints will get there will make them think twice about heading back to NO.

I used to live in Dallas and people from San Antonio would come up in buses to watch the Cowboys.  

It would be better for the people in SA to have their own team and this will proove to the NFL that they deserve it.  

Offline SPURSX3

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Saints selling tickets fast in San Antonio
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2005, 11:57:48 AM »
the response has been mindblowing!!!!


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S.A. Saints tickets are a big, easy sell
Web Posted: 09/15/2005 12:00 AM CDT

Tom Orsborn
Express-News Staff Writer

Never did the Saints, nor city officials, imagine they'd be pleading with local football fans for patience in their pursuit of pro football tickets.

Yet, that was the situation on Wednesday after a feverish rush gobbled up 50,000 tickets for three Saints games in the Alamodome within eight hours after going on sale.

The demand for tickets was so heavy, computers used to process online requests crashed 15 minutes after sales began at 10 a.m.

Lines of customers snaked outside the Alamodome by late morning. The wait, compounded by initial unavailability of choice seats, irritated many in the crowd, thought to number about 500 at its peak.

"It's unbelievable the way the community has turned out," Assistant City Manager Roland Lozano said.

Said Alamodome director Mike Abington: "This reminds me of the response you might get for the Beatles, the Rolling Stones — or Garth Brooks."

"I hope they count right because I'm pretty pleased," Mayor Phil Hardberger said. "Apparently, it's been a hot ticket. It didn't surprise me, but it is certainly comforting to know we did that. Thinking it and seeing it are two different things."

Ticket windows at the Alamodome remained opened until 10 p.m. for late walk-up sales. By day's end, officials were stressing three points to the public:

None of the three Alamodome games has yet sold out. Tickets still are available at all price levels. And tickets are available for all seating locations.

That includes luxury suites. The Alamodome has 34 to offer, although area corporations pounced to fill out paperwork for suite purchases during a meeting Wednesday morning at La Cantera with Saints owner Tom Benson.

City leaders said the Saints weren't prepared to deal with the rush. As the high demand became obvious, extra staffers were put on phone banks and at ticket windows.

Much of the frustration expressed by fans concerned the limited availability of choice seats. Even those first in line at the Alamodome — one fan arrived at 3:30 a.m. — were told that only seats in the upper levels and end zone were still available.

Officials said the Saints' obligation to about 35,000 season-ticket holders in New Orleans complicated the issue of which seats to offer. Those season-ticket holders have until 10 days before the kickoff of each game to claim comparable seating in the Alamodome.

But a Saints official said the club will not put aside 35,000 Alamodome tickets for season-ticket holders. A source said the number of tickets will probably be significantly lower.

"We are off to a great start," said Saints marketing director Conrad "Connie" Kowal. "It was a very positive, overwhelming response."

Displaced by the Katrina disaster, the Saints moved their training headquarters to San Antonio 13 days ago. On Monday, three Saints home games — Oct. 2 against Buffalo, Oct. 16 against Atlanta and Dec. 24 against Detroit — were moved to the Alamodome.

Four others were moved to Tiger Stadium on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge, La.

A portion of the Saints' sales staff was moved to Baton Rouge on Wednesday, further compounding problems with sales here.

Those complications didn't dampen the reaction of local officials.

"The response — and I know it sounds cliche — has been overwhelming," said Christian Archer, special assistant to Hardberger. "Are we going to sell out all three games at the dome? Damn right."

Archer said local fans should consider the Saints' plight.

"To have learned the schedule on Monday, and to see what the Saints have done since then, truly amazing," Archer said, "especially when you consider that a lot of these people have lost their homes and are wearing only T-shirts because they have no clothes."

Rumors that scalpers and ticket brokers were hoarding tickets were quickly dismissed.

"You can't compare this to anything we've ever done," said Jerome Cohen, owner of Best Tickets.

"They (the Saints) are doing something here that takes an entire season and compressing it into two weeks. Usually, they start selling tickets the day after their previous regular season ends. Their business has got to be brisk. They have to sell 65,000 seats in two weeks."

Both Cohen and John Binder, owner of Awesome Tickets, said demand for Saints tickets was very heavy.

"Our phones have been ringing off the hook since the announcement," Binder said. "We're getting calls from Austin, Corpus Christi, Laredo, the Valley."

Said Cohen: "There will be complete capacity for all games. I don't have any doubt for that, even the Christmas Eve game. San Antonio is an NFL town and this opportunity fits hand in hand with what people have been dreaming about."



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Alamo City out to sell self as being big-league enough for the NFL
Web Posted: 09/15/2005 12:00 AM CDT

Tom Orsborn
Express-News Staff Writer

The giants of San Antonio's corporate community Wednesday pledged their support to ticket sales and sponsorships for the displaced New Orleans Saints — and for a sales pitch designed to permanently place an NFL franchise in the Alamo City.

Summoned on short notice to a breakfast at La Cantera Country Club, high-ranking corporate officials — including representatives from Toyota, USAA, Washington Mutual, Valero and Clear Channel Communications — met with city leaders and voiced support for the belle of the breakfast, Saints owner Tom Benson.

The meeting, called late Tuesday by the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, was expected to have about 50 participants, but instead drew nearly 200. The standing-room throng that turned out heard an emotional speech by former mayor Henry Cisneros about the need to bring an NFL team to San Antonio.

Cisneros told attendees that filling the Alamodome for Saints games "redoubles our mutual effort in building our community — and it is a financial affirmation of economic momentum."

City Councilman Chip Haass called Cisneros' speech "stirring — something out of 'Braveheart.'"

Said Haass: "I thought we were going to be charging through the walls in support of the cause."

While attendees didn't broach the sensitive subject of a permanent move by the Saints to San Antonio, the fresh possibilities of an NFL team moving to San Antonio in the near future provided a strong undercurrent.

Christian Archer, special assistant the mayor, said the city is ready to accept any challenge that arises from the city of Los Angeles as a rival relocation or expansion site.

The NFL continues to press for a team in Los Angeles, but that city has yet to put a viable plan in place.

"L.A. has had its chance," Archer said. "We are a city on the move."

Benson was accompanied to the meeting by his chief of administration, Arnold Fielkow, and by several members of the Saints' marketing staff. Fielkow explained the team needs 100 sponsorships from area corporations.

Those sponsorships, sources said, can cost up to $250,000 each. However, with the Saints scheduled to play only three of their home games in the San Antonio, Fielkow laid the groundwork for tailored sponsorships that take the short-season circumstances into account.

Attendees also discussed expanding the support campaign to include civic and business interests in Austin, Laredo, South Texas and Monterrey, Mexico.

Details of the discussions drew enthusiastic support.

H.B. Zachry, chairman of Zachry Construction, immediately signed up his company as a sponsor.

"This is a very special opportunity and it will require some possibility thinking," Zachry said. "Getting an NFL team will allow us to move the city up a notch."

Jon Gary Herrera, public affairs director for Time-Warner Cable, described the meeting as a "mini-pep rally."

"To have that kind of firepower in the room on such short notice, that was impressive," Herrera said. "You could feel the excitement in there."

"We got the leading CEOs in town," Mayor Phil Hardberger said, "and they were very enthusiastic."

Benson heaped praise on local leaders for supporting his team's temporary relocation to San Antonio and issued another plea for sellout crowds.

"My players can walk on water when they feel the support of the fans," Benson said.

Attendees were handed a bumper sticker that read "FAITH" with the letter "A" represented by the fleur-de-lis used in the Saints' logo.

"Things are moving very rapidly," County Judge Nelson Wolff said. "I think you will see all the companies take some kind of package."

"Clearly, the city, corporately, has come of age," Haass said. "I really do believe these blocks of tickets and sponsorships will be gobbled up very quickly."

Many civic leaders privately believe the Saints will make their stay in San Antonio permanent.

"Tom has told me in personal conversations that they have been well received here," Wolff said. "Their kids are in school. All of their staff people are feeling pretty good about being here. Their base is here. How long they will stay, we don't know. Regardless of what happens with the Saints, we just want to be in the position that the NFL knows we're a viable market."

"This is an important time for San Antonio to assert itself," said John T. Montford, senior vice president for SBC and chamber chairman. "We are obviously sensitive to the situation in New Orleans. And San Antonio, specifically, and Texas, as a whole, have done their part."

But that doesn't mean San Antonio can't look forward with new optimism to a future in the NFL.

"I expect there will be expansion down the road and we need to convince the NFL we are ready for it," Montford said.

Tom Glade, vice president and market manager for Clear Channel, praised the "overwhelming" response of fans to first-day ticket sales Wednesday.

The NFL, Glade says, believes San Antonio can pull in only 25,000 fans per game, not enough to support a franchise.

"The fact is even when San Antonio was one of the finalists in the past trying to get a franchise we had a smaller and different look than we do now," Glade said.
« Last Edit: September 15, 2005, 11:58:09 AM by SPURSX3 »
On the set of Walker Texas Ranger Chuck Norris brought a dying lamb back to life by nuzzling it with his beard. As the onlookers gathered, the lamb sprang to life. Chuck Norris then roundhouse kicked it, killing it instantly. The lesson? The good Chuck giveth, and the good Chuck, he taketh away.