13,000 has been the average attendance at Kings' home games this year, then the Lakers come to town and it sells out. Take the stick our of your arse and see the light, Laker fans. The extras were NOT Kings fans to begin with. Those fans who quit attending Kings' home games probably did so because the cost of the tickets does not come close to being worth it, watching this team play.
And I know you are pretty stupid, but let me try to explain. Sacramento has the Kings and that is it. People moving up here from LA, and believe me when I tell you that has been ongoing for decades now, bring their loyalties for ALL the LA sports teams with them and do not jump on the Kings bandwagon any more then a Kings fan would change to the Lakers. That is just so inconcievable, it defies any type of intelligent response, which would be ignored and lost on you anyway. It is just dumb to suggest that Kings' fans would be any different, sorry.
You posting this says you do care. It's ok. Join your fellow friends in Sacramento who decided to jump ship.
Huh?
What on earth are YOU talking about, because this has nothing to do at all with what I was talking about. Are you sure you are in the right thread? i know is can be difficult trying to be perky and alert when most of your day is spent in some kind of self-induced fog, but you still never cease in amazing me on how moronic you can come across by refusing to understand what you read and then completely jump into another area. Why not just admit you would rather TALK about something else instead of trying to make it sound like that was what the other person was saying when it clearly was not.
I hate to break it to you but all the sudden a few thousand Laker fans did not just up and move to Sacramento between last year (when he was getting boo'd heavy with 0 MVP chants)
I hate to break to YOU, but these Laker fans have been here all along, genius. They have been steadily moving up here for years. They did not suddenly show up; the tickets were available and the Lakers were in town, so they bought them up.
I know this is hard, but bear with me. You see, in previous years, these tickets were not available to Laker fans in the Sacramento area, unless they bought them along side Kings fans to see any old team come to Sacramento to play the Kings. You see, sell outs prevented many of them from attending, even the Laker/Kings games at Arco.You see, because they could not buy any tickets. They were not available. Because Kings fans back then would buy them to see ALL the Kings' home games. Not just the Laker games. So the Laker fans in this area could not buy them up like they did this week when the Lakers came to town and they could. Because the tickets were now available. Because Arco has not been selling out this year and most home games that do NOT feature the Lakers leaves many empty seats. Because the Kings are not that good this year and some fans find the cost of the tickets not worth the product on the floor. But then the Lakers came to town...you see. These local Laker fans often can not go down to LA to see the Lakers play, and even if they could, they may find it difficult to find a ticket. But the Kings' home game have not been selling out. And the Lakers were coming to Sacramento. So they could buy these unused tickets to see their team play right here in Sacramento.
<phew>