FRIDAY, May, 22 – until the club experienced “technical issues” and extended it until next Wednesday, today was the deadline for Liverpool FC season ticket renewals. The 2014-15 season not even finished yet and Liverpool fans are handing over oodles of cash today for next year’s adventure.
My first season ticket, which cost just £45, aged 14, came back in 1982 and I’ve had one ever since.
Along with thousands of other diehards, I’ve renewed, and in my case, I’m handing over £735 x 2, so £1,470 for two adult tickets in the Spion Kop; one for me and one for my son, Sam who turned 17 years of during the current campaign. I did this with a heavy heart. Being a Liverpool fan isn’t, or shouldn’t be, a financial consideration. I can’t really afford it, but we have to afford it if a part of our lives that means football, friends and family isn’t to go by the wayside.
Early last month, on the announcement of next season’s pricing, I wrote an open letter to John W Henry expressing my dismay and sadness at the absence of any concessions for young adults in the 17-21 age bracket — something that sees my son’s ticket jump in cost by £535 from £200 as an under-16 to a full adult price. The same letter was sent directly to the ticket office at Liverpool FC requesting that they consider the introduction of an extra pricing tier to reflect the status of Sam, who is still at school, and other young people; either not yet in full-time employment or those unfortunate to be unemployed.
This was something promised at the Anfield ticket office window this time last year when Sam (pictured below), after paying a full adult price aged 14 and 15 after being on the waiting list since birth, was able to take advantage of newly-introduced junior pricing. The advent of a price for children was a welcome development, generating good PR, albeit one which cost the club very little in terms of revenue such is the minimal number of juniors who hold a cherished season ticket.
Despite my protestations, my plea has fallen on deaf ears.
What I must put on record is that the person who handled a lengthy dialogue on this matter on behalf of the club displayed sensitivity and understanding, offered a willing ear and conducted themselves in a thoroughly professional and caring manner. This was not one of the ubiquitous “suits” — the incongruously placed club officials who saw fit to share the pitch with Steven Gerrard on his last Anfield hurrah a week ago, but instead, one of the good guys; definitely someone on our side who admits that pricing structures need further review.
The matter has been discussed already with the ticket working party group, which has representation for Spirit of Shankly and Spion Kop 1906.
However, despite the matter being raised at a higher executive level (and here we are to presume with FSG) the answer to my request was a polite, but firm “no”.
Sam, and his fellow schoolboys, students and unemployed season ticket holders will stump up a full adult tariff of between £735 and £869 for season tickets or face the prospect of packing up watching Liverpool. Just have a think about that — giving up the match at 17. It’s just plain wrong.
Once again, it is worth noting that very few young people make up the average Anfield crowd for league fixtures and even fewer hold season-tickets. They number in the hundreds, rather than the thousands. By my calculation, one not disputed by the club during a meeting with the working party, there are (and I’m being generous here) approximately 500 young people in this small cluster — a sad indictment of Anfield’s rapidly ageing demographic.
So, why has my request to introduce a 17-21 season ticket price, a concession available at other clubs, Everton and Manchester United included, been rejected? To begin with, I’ve been advised that it is being looked at; a high priority on a long list of issues pertaining to ticket access, particularly for locals, and cost per se.
Fantastic. But I heard the same thing last year. Forgive me for being cynical but can I be confident that a price for young adults will definitely be available next May? I haven’t been given any categorical assurances on that front, so read into that what you like.
The reasons given for the price charged to a 17 year-old schoolboy remaining set at £735 are as follows.
Ticket budgets for the upcoming financial year had already been set. Apparently “it is about finding the right time” to correct the wrongs of a previous regime; a convenient “not me, guv’nor” shift of the blame on to the ownership predecessors of FSG.
If we accept that a deliberate policy to exclude children and young adults was a plan hatched by “custodians” Hicks and Gillett (but let’s not presume it doesn’t predate that sorry period) then wouldn’t it make sense to do the right thing and actually put it straight? A wonderful PR exercise perhaps — one which would convey a sense of understanding, long-term vision, a desire to re-connect with an increasingly disenfranchised local community?
No. It would seem that the bean counters are too concerned with counting every last English pound to care about all that. Which brings us back to budget. Let’s have a look at the figures. Let’s talk the accountant’s language. What exactly is the price of doing the right thing and removing the risk of losing our remaining young fans before they’ve even left school or found work?
Creating a season-ticket price with a 50 per cent concession for 17-21s, based on my uncontested approximation of there being 500 in that category, would cost the club in the region of £150,000. Total season ticket revenue (which doesn’t include single league match ticket purchases) brings the club in the region of £20million per season. This is a conservative estimate to hammer home the point — that the concession mooted above would require a piddling adjustment of 0.75 per cent to the revenue prediction relating to season ticket revenue.
But it’s about “finding the right time” — despite the club being fully aware of this the moment they introduced the under-16 pricing last summer. I was perturbed to hear that this “difficulty” is weighed up amid “lots of noise around ticket prices” arising from the Hull City boycott, the Twenty’s Plenty campaign and the “Black Flag” protest at Anfield earlier this season in response to the fact many of the young lads in the Spion Kop 1906 group — who provide the colour and visual backdrop the club markets so aggressively as the “Twelfth Man”–– have already been priced out.
If the club thinks the “noise” is going to abate, they can think again.
In the middle of my dialogue with Liverpool FC, Sam received a letter offering him concessionary prices for next season’s cup ties. Reduced pricing to attend Capital One and FA Cup and Europa League ties but only if you first stump the adult price for your season ticket. The letter might have been headed, “Save yourself some money, young man, but pay an adult price for the privilege”.
The depressing Anfield atmosphere is now almost a cliché; a symptom of an ageing and increasingly embittered local crowd. A generation of teenagers have already been priced out and follow the Reds on Sky at home or from the pub, joined by many of their dads. Thousands still swallow the bitter financial pill, but make no mistake thousands have already bitten the Anfield dust.
Cast your eye around Anfield and it is easy to see seats once filled by loyal supporters that now sit a legion of once-a-year customers with little appreciation of the notion of support or tradition and for whom an annual pilgrimage makes the cost of a single match ticket seem palatable.
Most of us have had enough. This is not about winning and losing. It’s about reclaiming our birthright and watching Liverpool at Anfield. It’s not yours, it’s ours and we’re not giving it up without a fight.
It’s time for FSG to prove they care; to prove their words and promises aren’t hollow. It’s time for them go a step further than “recognising” issues and do something to address them. So, 17-21 season ticket pricing for next season? Greater access and fairer pricing for Liverpudlians and young people in general?
All these things are high on their list of priorities, or so we’re told. My message, on the day when the lifeblood of this football club feels an enormous pain in the wallet, is that we’re watching you closely. This can’t go on. Prove that you care, or we will assume that you don’t.
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Pics: David Rawcliffe-Propaganda-Photo/Mike Nevin/80scasualsblog.blogspot.co.uk
Similar problem last season wouldn’t let me change a name on my season ticket from daughter of21 to son of 15 said try next season but then renewal said this time nontransferable can give it up though if I want to
Mine and my brothers 2 season tickets in upper centenary £1750. How on earth ca you justify this price for 19 afternoons (mostly Sunday)?
Having to take a break this year – will be watching on the internet box and then going the Crosby for a few pints with the lads who have been
Absolutely heart broken
I went to every game in the early 90’s on the Kop paying the kids price of £5 (was it actually £4.50?). I used to meet up with my school friends in the same place on the Kop about 90mins before kick off.
Now I have a share of my brothers season ticket in the lower cen. which touches nearly £45 a match. Think I’m giving it up next year as it is too much money for a crap time. Cue same old conversation about atmosphere. However, I’m an adult who can afford it but simply thinks it is woeful value for money. How the kids get in I dont know. Oh wait, they dont.
Great piece. Been a regular since 1976, now got a season ticket in the Upper Centenary which I share with my lad. I’ve just renewed but with a heavy heart, very close to jibbing it. It’s not the club I’ve grown up supporting any more. It doesn’t seem bothered that it’s fanbase is increasingly consisting of day trippers from everywhere but Merseyside, who have no connection to the area. In fact I think that they’d be happier if there were no scousers in the ground whatsoever, as there would be more “spend per head” or whatever the latest marketing spiel is? A horrific day at Wembley amongst our “banter boy” support in the semi’s, and half an away end full at Hull despite a boycott sums up our current fanbase I’ afraid.
Good balanced reading. Your point about having a ‘youth’ level of pricing for 17-21 will find much support.
You make reference to the ageing demographic several times and also connect this to the generally poor Anfield atmosphere. This might be connected, probably is but I don’t know — regardless, why don’t YOU give up your season ticket so that young lads can go the match? You’ve been going since you were 14… Give some young lads a chance to enjoy Anfield.
Demand at LFC, Arsenal and United is huge, and as you and others put it, young lads are being lost to the game. Football is FIFA, the pub, and playing in the park. It’s not going the match with your mates – cos fans are predominantly Middle aged men who monopolise it.
Seriously, why not turn your season ticket in? You could still go the odd cup game but by continuing to hold on to your ticket, you’re part of the reason lads aren’t at the match any more
Stop having a go at once a year customers. I love my lfc , learn the songs, live in Nz and only see them live once every couple of years when I can afford to fly over. So the constant barrage about only being worthy to see the team you love play at home is to live within a few miles and only ever with a season ticket. Bore off
If you have been priced out at Anfield, then you are more than welcome at AFC Liverpool next season. £80 season ticket for 21 games. With LFC most likely in the UEFA cup, there will be plenty of 3pm Saturday fixtures which do not clash with LFC games. Go to http://www.afcliverpool.tv for info
Up until a few months ago I thought going the match for the young lot, ‘the future’, was ALMOST finished. I’ve changed my mind now, I think it is definitely finished. Unless the club are willing to lead the way against what is essentially a modern football problem (or top flight football at least) then playing in a soulless ground with a sporadic offering of passionate young’uns is going to be the norm.
LIVERPOOL FC DOESN’T CARE ABOUT IT’S FANS. Not a bad banner idea I suppose.
Liverpool fc does not care about fans, they prefer day tripper s because they spend money in the club shop buying over priced soverneirs, and true fans who want to create a atmosphere are left without tickets, seriously thinking about not going to games after this season after watching Liverpool fc since 1972