Post by QPR Report on Jul 13, 2009 6:46:49 GMT
Observer/Paul Wilson
Bradford City reap rewards of filling their stadium, not their pocketsWith gates falling as quickly as their team, Bradford have tried harder than most to attract fans back to the game
This is turning out to be football's summer of money, with John Terry being pelted with pound notes, Cristiano Ronaldo going to Real Madrid for a record fee and Gareth Barry turning his back on a dream move to Liverpool for the sake of bigger wages at Manchester City.
Anyone who objects to such lavish spending and obscene amounts of cash being waved under players' noses will be relieved to know that life is carrying on much the same as usual in Yorkshire, where top-flight football may currently be as fanciful a myth as Ronaldo's take-home pay but value for money is still an important consideration.
Bradford City, in particular, have just ensured five-figure season-ticket sales for the third year running, no mean feat for a team in the fourth tier. The Bantams appear in no imminent danger of gaining promotion to League One – despite a strong start last season they were out of contention for even a play-off place by Easter – yet they have the division's attendance record virtually sewn up.
As a result of an innovative 2007 scheme whereby ticket prices were slashed to £138 per season on the condition that sufficient supporters signed up to the offer, the club sold 12,000 season tickets, three times more than anyone else in the division. Last season Bradford changed their offer to "buy one, get one free", falling 700 short of their initial target of 9,000 season tickets but still ending up with average gates of 12,700 per home match, twice as many as Luton in second place and three or four times better than most of their League Two rivals. They eventually sold more than 11,000 season tickets.
For the coming season, Bradford announced last Christmas that season tickets would be available for just £99 and £138 to supporters willing to sign up early, and though the official price went up to £175 in March and is now £250, the take-up on the offers means that almost 10,000 have already been sold.
There is a drawback, of course. Because of the reduced prices Bradford are not making two or three times as much money as their rivals. Roughly speaking, they have dropped their prices by half and gained twice as many supporters, so income-wise they are little better off. Yet the matchday experience at Valley Parade is better for all concerned when there are 12,000 in the ground rather than 5,000 or 6,000, subsidiary revenue goes up and all the young spectators enticed in by the cheap rates are potentially Bradford supporters for the future.
"The principle is affordable season tickets," explains David Baldwin, a Bradford board member and the club's director of operations. "We are the only league football club in Bradford, which is quite a large city, and we didn't feel like sitting back and accepting the fact that only about 5,000 people seemed to want to come and watch us.
"Football should be affordable to everybody whatever the economic climate, and we thought we were in a good position to make the demographics of the city work for us. We thought people would want to be involved as long as the price was right, and we have been proved correct.
"The key to it is that you have to repackage the offer every season, find a new hook to pull people in, otherwise it goes stale. Every year we've done a different thing, put a different spin on the season tickets."
Bradford beat Burnley 2-1 in a friendly yesterday, a reminder that it is exactly 10 years since Paul Jewell's team were also looking forward with some trepidation to a first season in the Premier League. The Bantams lasted two years at the top, a year more than anyone had predicted, though their subsequent decline was swifter and more pronounced than anything that befell Leeds, Barnsley or Sheffield Wednesday. So Bradford are not an unmitigated success story, though they do know they are an asset valued by their community.
"We have come back down through the divisions, but we have avoided getting trapped in a circle of decline," Baldwin says. "The most gratifying thing we have found, whenever we have a new initiative or an open day, is that people respond in their thousands. They want to get behind the club, and we want to facilitate that."
www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/jul/12/bradford-city-season-tickets-supporters
Bradford City reap rewards of filling their stadium, not their pocketsWith gates falling as quickly as their team, Bradford have tried harder than most to attract fans back to the game
This is turning out to be football's summer of money, with John Terry being pelted with pound notes, Cristiano Ronaldo going to Real Madrid for a record fee and Gareth Barry turning his back on a dream move to Liverpool for the sake of bigger wages at Manchester City.
Anyone who objects to such lavish spending and obscene amounts of cash being waved under players' noses will be relieved to know that life is carrying on much the same as usual in Yorkshire, where top-flight football may currently be as fanciful a myth as Ronaldo's take-home pay but value for money is still an important consideration.
Bradford City, in particular, have just ensured five-figure season-ticket sales for the third year running, no mean feat for a team in the fourth tier. The Bantams appear in no imminent danger of gaining promotion to League One – despite a strong start last season they were out of contention for even a play-off place by Easter – yet they have the division's attendance record virtually sewn up.
As a result of an innovative 2007 scheme whereby ticket prices were slashed to £138 per season on the condition that sufficient supporters signed up to the offer, the club sold 12,000 season tickets, three times more than anyone else in the division. Last season Bradford changed their offer to "buy one, get one free", falling 700 short of their initial target of 9,000 season tickets but still ending up with average gates of 12,700 per home match, twice as many as Luton in second place and three or four times better than most of their League Two rivals. They eventually sold more than 11,000 season tickets.
For the coming season, Bradford announced last Christmas that season tickets would be available for just £99 and £138 to supporters willing to sign up early, and though the official price went up to £175 in March and is now £250, the take-up on the offers means that almost 10,000 have already been sold.
There is a drawback, of course. Because of the reduced prices Bradford are not making two or three times as much money as their rivals. Roughly speaking, they have dropped their prices by half and gained twice as many supporters, so income-wise they are little better off. Yet the matchday experience at Valley Parade is better for all concerned when there are 12,000 in the ground rather than 5,000 or 6,000, subsidiary revenue goes up and all the young spectators enticed in by the cheap rates are potentially Bradford supporters for the future.
"The principle is affordable season tickets," explains David Baldwin, a Bradford board member and the club's director of operations. "We are the only league football club in Bradford, which is quite a large city, and we didn't feel like sitting back and accepting the fact that only about 5,000 people seemed to want to come and watch us.
"Football should be affordable to everybody whatever the economic climate, and we thought we were in a good position to make the demographics of the city work for us. We thought people would want to be involved as long as the price was right, and we have been proved correct.
"The key to it is that you have to repackage the offer every season, find a new hook to pull people in, otherwise it goes stale. Every year we've done a different thing, put a different spin on the season tickets."
Bradford beat Burnley 2-1 in a friendly yesterday, a reminder that it is exactly 10 years since Paul Jewell's team were also looking forward with some trepidation to a first season in the Premier League. The Bantams lasted two years at the top, a year more than anyone had predicted, though their subsequent decline was swifter and more pronounced than anything that befell Leeds, Barnsley or Sheffield Wednesday. So Bradford are not an unmitigated success story, though they do know they are an asset valued by their community.
"We have come back down through the divisions, but we have avoided getting trapped in a circle of decline," Baldwin says. "The most gratifying thing we have found, whenever we have a new initiative or an open day, is that people respond in their thousands. They want to get behind the club, and we want to facilitate that."
www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/jul/12/bradford-city-season-tickets-supporters