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Sunday, December 15, 2024

Game One of The NBA Finals Didn’t Sell Out, and Why That’s OK With the Warriors

Photo by Josh Sorenson from Pexels

*TicketIQ is a proud partner of Front Office Sports.

Mostof the chatter around the 2018 NBA finals has focused on the lack of novelty surrounding the record-setting fourth consecutive Cavaliers-Warriors matchup. 2018, however, brings at least one new and unexpected twist: last-minute buyers can get tickets directly from the team, even after tip-off

While fans and the front office execs alike have been conditioned to label  ‘not selling out’ as a failure, in the new world of ticket buying, it may be the best way for teams to compete against the secondary market.

Over the last 15 years, the Internet-driven secondary market–in addition to creating billion dollar businesses–has trained ticket buyers to wait. On sites like TicketIQ and Stubhub, last-minute shopping now accounts for as much as 50% of sales. When a team or show sells out weeks or months ahead of that last minute shopping, they’re essentially taking themselves out of the game at the very moment when it’s being won or lost, economically speaking.

Since the Cavs and Warriors first Finals in 2015, teams have been steadily taking back tickets from the same brokers that they’d been selling to for years. In addition to sports, some of the biggest acts in music have also changed how and when they sell tickets. For her Reputation tour, Taylor Swift, like the Warriors, sold tickets until the start of the event.

What the journalists who chided the Reputation Tour miss is that because of her ‘slow ticketing’ sales model, Taylor Swift made roughly $1 million more per show than she did for her ‘sold out’ 1989 tour.  With those kinds of numbers, not selling out is making more sense to promoters and teams than ever before.

It is somewhat refreshing to consider that in this new ticketing model, teams are essentially betting on themselves. Forward-looking organizations like the Knicks and Carolina Hurricanes have realized that the biggest risk lies not in failing to sell out, but in giving away their customers and any potential ‘market-based’ upside to the secondary market.

For lower-demand games like last night where teams make less money because tickets drop below face prices, fans end up winning. Patient fans in the Bay area paid as little as $315 on the secondary market for game one, which was $100 below the face price tickets available directly from the Warriors at 9:01 pm.

If LeBron and the Cavs can’t rebound from their tough OT loss, prices for game four in Cleveland might drop below $200, which would be the first time this decade that’s happened for an NBA finals game. It would also mean a rare NBA Finals loss for brokers in Cleveland.

If LeBron can avoid a sweep, prices for a clinching game 5 or 7 at Oracle Arena would skyrocket and equate to big profits for the Warriors. It would also call to mind one of the oldest adages in sports and business, and one that no athlete appreciates more than LeBron James: you’ve got to be in it to win it.

*TicketIQ is a proud partner of Front Office Sports.

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