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Author Topic: 2023 US Grand Prix Heroes and Zeroes  (Read 31528 times)

Offline Jericoke

Re: 2023 US Grand Prix Heroes and Zeroes
« Reply #15 on: October 27, 2023, 06:44:21 PM »
On multiple occasions, the Channel 4 commentary claimed it was a sell-out crowd.

1) Quite a few in the main grandstand were disguised as empty seats
2) The hill was full - this being the hill full of people who'd bought heavily-discounted tickets at Costco
3) At least one grandstand never got constructed, with the people who were due to be in that grandstand moved. I gather Las Vegas has the same issue, albeit sightlines are being claimed as the motive in that case.

I presume the EU has proper rules about reporting 'attendance', but North American sports leagues/entertainment venues are very good at 'selling out' by selling their tickets in a block to ticket resalers.  So the race probably was sold out, from the point of view of COTA organizers, just that TicketMaster or StubHub or whoever had piles of unsold seats.

NHL and MLB games really suffer from tickets 'sold' being far more numerous than butts in seats.

Online cosworth151

Re: 2023 US Grand Prix Heroes and Zeroes
« Reply #16 on: October 28, 2023, 03:25:37 PM »
Las Vegas pre-sold huge blocks of tickets to hotels who bundled them into packages with room, meals, drinks and other perks. Some even included Paddock Club privileges. Those sales were made before tickets went on sale to the general public.
“You can search the world over for the finer things, but you won't find a match for the American road and the creatures that live on it.”
― Bob Dylan

Offline Alianora La Canta

Re: 2023 US Grand Prix Heroes and Zeroes
« Reply #17 on: October 28, 2023, 06:49:54 PM »
I presume the EU has proper rules about reporting 'attendance', but North American sports leagues/entertainment venues are very good at 'selling out' by selling their tickets in a block to ticket resalers.  So the race probably was sold out, from the point of view of COTA organizers, just that TicketMaster or StubHub or whoever had piles of unsold seats.

The EU does have attendance rules. However, their rules allow any event which sold all tickets available for the sets existing at the time of the performance, and that had a defined maximum number of permitted tickets (e.g. it had a rule about how many people could be put in the general admission area and that many tickets were sold), to describe itself as "sold out", even if the number of seats was reduced, the price of tickets was reduced, some seats never got constructed (and the tickets for them never put on sale or subsequently withdrawn) or (not mentioned in my previous post) some of the tickets were sold for free/given away (a common thing at certain levels of sports, including most non-F1 British motorsport, is to supply free tickets to children and the carers of people with disabilities. The "sellout" rules even allow venues to send batches of free tickets to schools, for example, on a proactive basis and still use the tag). It can also still be used even if none of the people who bought tickets turns up (provided the reason was outside the control of the organiser e.g. weather).

Selling in blocks is allowed, but when doing so there are rules about checking all those tickets were sold on (as hotels would do), used directly (e.g. school tickets) or returned (the latter, if no subsequent sale/distribution occurs, rules out using "sell-out" to describe the event once the returns come in, though there is allowance for adverts that went to print in the gap but aren't published until after returns begin to arrive). Failure to monitor this prevents the use of "sold-out". (I think the EU requires any group of above 9 tickets to be treated as a block, but some countries may use a lower threshold and the UK currently requires monitoring of any group of more than 6 tickets).

The American system sounds like it allows even more ways for a sellout crowd to be, well, not sold-out.
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