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(Yahoo) Fail Jacksonville Jaguars continue to lead the league in blackouts. Too bad that isn't a defensive statistic   (sports.yahoo.com) divider line 39
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39 Comments   (+0 »)


 
BigEd [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 03:22:45 PM  
We are undefeated in that category. My buddy has season tickets and said the last home game only had about 37k at the stadium. The product on the field just isn't worth what is being charged.

 
GAT_00 [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 03:26:32 PM  
BigEd: My buddy has season tickets and said the last home game only had about 37k at the stadium.

They're barely hitting 50%? Damn.

 
IAmRight [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 03:38:46 PM  
It helps keep people from realizing quite how sh*tty they really are.

 
Kome [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 04:02:30 PM  
*sigh*

The Jags have gone downhill fast...

 
UNC_Samurai [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 04:48:52 PM  
Out of curiosity, what were the attendance rates in the 90's when Brunell was leading them to the playoffs?

 
downstairs [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 05:13:13 PM  
I've never understood the blackout rule, but I guess the NFL thinks it makes sense financially.

Ok, so you have 10,000 empty seats. How many people would be watching on TV that would never fill those 10,000 seats? I know I personally don't like going to games (and I live walking distance from the Saints stadium). I've turned down free tickets- its just too much of a hassle. I like watching on TV, and I have to believe there would be many more than 10,000 people who fit this description.

I can't see how turning down advertising to many tens of thousands of people is somehow worth it relative to the money you'd make from 10,000 ticket sales and the stuff they buy at the stadium.

 
Treygreen13 2009-11-05 06:50:51 PM  
I'm sorry, this thread isn't getting sufficient attention from Farkers, and will be redlit unless we reach 100 comments before 7pm, CST.

 
InferiousX [recently expired TotalFark] 2009-11-05 06:56:43 PM  
Slight threadjack, but this one seems to be as good or bad as any.

Contemplating a move to Florida later in the winter. Jacksonville looks ideal. Any Jacksonville Fakers have some input?

 
lacydog 2009-11-05 06:57:08 PM  
downstairs: I've never understood the blackout rule, but I guess the NFL thinks it makes sense financially.

Ok, so you have 10,000 empty seats. How many people would be watching on TV that would never fill those 10,000 seats? I know I personally don't like going to games (and I live walking distance from the Saints stadium). I've turned down free tickets- its just too much of a hassle. I like watching on TV, and I have to believe there would be many more than 10,000 people who fit this description.

I can't see how turning down advertising to many tens of thousands of people is somehow worth it relative to the money you'd make from 10,000 ticket sales and the stuff they buy at the stadium.


It might get people NFL Sunday Ticket or something like that.

/shrugs

 
Dumb-Ass-Monkey [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 07:00:31 PM  
Sad when the Raiders are getting more fans that you are...

 
Bestbank Tiger 2009-11-05 07:01:28 PM  
downstairs: I've never understood the blackout rule, but I guess the NFL thinks it makes sense financially.

Ok, so you have 10,000 empty seats. How many people would be watching on TV that would never fill those 10,000 seats? I know I personally don't like going to games (and I live walking distance from the Saints stadium). I've turned down free tickets- its just too much of a hassle. I like watching on TV, and I have to believe there would be many more than 10,000 people who fit this description.

I can't see how turning down advertising to many tens of thousands of people is somehow worth it relative to the money you'd make from 10,000 ticket sales and the stuff they buy at the stadium.


It's a hassle to go to the Dome when you don't have to deal with traffic and parking??

 
Lou Cypher 2009-11-05 07:02:25 PM  
I'd like to see the league contract back to 30 teams rather than relocate failing franchises, the level of play this season indicates talent is spread to thin.

/know it will never happen

 
bluorangefyre 2009-11-05 07:06:14 PM  
InferiousX: Slight threadjack, but this one seems to be as good or bad as any.

Contemplating a move to Florida later in the winter. Jacksonville looks ideal. Any Jacksonville Fakers have some input?


I'm a native of that area, but haven't really ever lived there. I went through San Marco once and it seems like a nice area. But I really wouldn't want to live in the city itself - give me the outlying counties. St. Johns County is good. My family lives in Baker County, if you'd prefer to live in small towns and have to drive to Jacksonville to find anything to do.

Now back on topic, they keep saying the Jaguars are primed to move to Los Angeles. If they can't fill the UGA Bulldogs Slaughterhouse, what makes them think they'd fill any stadium in L.A.?

 
D-Liver [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 07:09:37 PM  
bluorangefyre: Now back on topic, they keep saying the Jaguars are primed to move to Los Angeles. what makes them think they'd fill any stadium in L.A.?

Population of Duval County: 826,436

Population of Los Angeles County: 10,393,185

 
JoeCowboy 2009-11-05 07:18:11 PM  
D-Liver: bluorangefyre: Now back on topic, they keep saying the Jaguars are primed to move to Los Angeles. what makes them think they'd fill any stadium in L.A.?

Population of Duval County: 826,436

Population of Los Angeles County: 10,393,185


And LA couldn't fill a stadium when the Rams were there

JC

 
ScotterOtter 2009-11-05 07:18:20 PM  
Said it before and I'll say it again...NFL blackouts should be illegal if any public funding is used to build stadiums

 
bluorangefyre 2009-11-05 07:26:14 PM  
D-Liver: bluorangefyre: Now back on topic, they keep saying the Jaguars are primed to move to Los Angeles. what makes them think they'd fill any stadium in L.A.?

Population of Duval County: 826,436

Population of Los Angeles County: 10,393,185


Duval County: Rabid football fans that care slightly more about the college team than the NFL team, but there's equal amounts of promotion for both

Los Angeles County: Rabid football fans that care more about USC than making a strong effort to even propose designing a stadium to attract an NFL franchise

 
Bunny Deville 2009-11-05 07:27:14 PM  
InferiousX: Slight threadjack, but this one seems to be as good or bad as any.

Contemplating a move to Florida later in the winter. Jacksonville looks ideal. Any Jacksonville Fakers have some input?


I'm sure you knew I'd chime in on this thread at some point.

Jax is a great place to live. I miss it a lot. Riverside/Avondale, Ortega, or anyplace on the other side of the river toward the beaches are all awesome places to live. Jax really feels like a lot of small towns put together rather than one big city.

They're not going to Vegas. I read their sportswriter's column every day- I was even one of the people whose question he answered today- and he seems convinced that the Jags are going to end up playing about half their games in London. Goodell REALLY wants this franchise to succeed, and he also REALLY wants someone playing in London. After I saw that stadium packed with football fans wearing ANY jersey, I don't blame him.... I think the market is there.

 
PeopleSuck 2009-11-05 07:29:14 PM  
JoeCowboy: D-Liver: bluorangefyre: Now back on topic, they keep saying the Jaguars are primed to move to Los Angeles. what makes them think they'd fill any stadium in L.A.?

Population of Duval County: 826,436

Population of Los Angeles County: 10,393,185

And LA couldn't fill a stadium when the Rams were there

JC

 
PeopleSuck 2009-11-05 07:29:49 PM  
Yes they did

 
Kome [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 07:50:42 PM  
InferiousX: Slight threadjack, but this one seems to be as good or bad as any.

Contemplating a move to Florida later in the winter. Jacksonville looks ideal. Any Jacksonville Fakers have some input?


St. John's county is beautiful, but the cops are total dicks. Duval county is much less aesthetically pleasing but the police are slightly less dickish.

 
FIFA 2009-11-05 08:20:26 PM  
downstairs: I've never understood the blackout rule, but I guess the NFL thinks it makes sense financially.

Ok, so you have 10,000 empty seats. How many people would be watching on TV that would never fill those 10,000 seats? I know I personally don't like going to games (and I live walking distance from the Saints stadium). I've turned down free tickets- its just too much of a hassle. I like watching on TV, and I have to believe there would be many more than 10,000 people who fit this description.

I can't see how turning down advertising to many tens of thousands of people is somehow worth it relative to the money you'd make from 10,000 ticket sales and the stuff they buy at the stadium.


The league gets the money for the TV deal whether the game is blacked out or not. The game being sold out or not makes no difference in money through TV deals.

BUT if you don't buy a ticket the team does not make money. When the team blacks out more people buy tickets. The blackout rule actually makes perfect sense.

/Jaguars fan
//Former Jacksonville native
///We just need to get our shiat together and buy the tickets

 
Lost Thought 00 2009-11-05 08:48:17 PM  
At some point the NFL has to cinsider the fact that it has 1 or 2 many teams, and that their overall bottom line is lowered by the dilution.

Sacrilege, I know, to even contemplate the fallibility of the NFL

/Always wondered who the Pope roots for.

 
greatgodyoshi 2009-11-05 08:51:40 PM  
FIFA: When the team blacks out more people buy tickets

No, they don't. They go to their nearest/favorite sports bar and watch it there.

 
Leeroy Jenkems 2009-11-05 09:12:52 PM  
greatgodyoshi: FIFA: When the team blacks out more people buy tickets

No, they don't. They go to their nearest/favorite sports bar and watch it there.


Not unless their favorite sports bar is 150 miles out of town. Blackouts cover satellite signals as well

 
Whodat? 2009-11-05 09:46:52 PM  
I really hate the blackout rule. If you really think about it, it's just the NFL punishing a market for not buying tickets. I guess they have the right to do that, but it seems awfully petty.

Seems to me that if they really wanted some good pub, they'd have said "hey, the economy's terrible, no blackouts this season!" I'd be really interested to see the sellout numbers if they did that, I bet they wouldn't drop a bit.

 
InferiousX [recently expired TotalFark] 2009-11-05 10:15:59 PM  
Thanks for the input guys.

Trying to wrangle up some money for a wintertime Florida vacation. Visit the area then if it's a Colts/Saints Superball....I'll consider assaulting someone I don't know if that means I got tickets. That game would be epic.

 
iamskibibitz 2009-11-05 10:53:42 PM  
Lou Cypher: I'd like to see the league contract back to 30 teams rather than relocate failing franchises, the level of play this season indicates talent is spread to thin.

/know it will never happen


Oakland --> LA
Jacksonville --> Central Texas (between Austin and San Antonio)

Problem solved.

 
FIFA 2009-11-05 10:55:08 PM  
greatgodyoshi: No, they don't. They go to their nearest/favorite sports bar and watch it there.

Yea...they do. You can't watch it at the sports bar if it's blacked out so they have to buy a ticket if they want to see it.

 
DiamondDave 2009-11-05 11:29:56 PM  
downstairs: I know I personally don't like going to games (and I live walking distance from the Saints stadium). I've turned down free tickets- its just too much of a hassle.

You live within walking distance, don't have to pay $30-$40 to park, can eat and drink at home, get free tickets and it's STILL too much of a hassle to go to a game?

WTF more do you need?

 
Kome [TotalFark] 2009-11-05 11:51:13 PM  
Lost Thought 00: /Always wondered who the Pope roots for.

New Orleans or Arizona, probably.

 
Phelyx 2009-11-06 12:10:51 AM  
In 1995, did anyone really think a team could work in a small MSA market like Jacksonville. Its amazing that Charlotte and Jacksonville beat out areas like St. Louis and Memphis.

/St. Louis turned out ok for awhile then they choked a bit.
//St. Louis probably would like to trade teams at this time.

 
PopeSchmope 2009-11-06 12:40:37 AM  
iamskibibitz: Jacksonville --> Central Texas (between Austin and San Antonio)

You know, I always thought that the Jaguars should move to San Antonio, but the idea of someplace between Austin and SA sounds intriguing. Kinda like Foxborough is between Boston and Providence. I think the idea is crazy enough to work. Or maybe not. I dunno.

Phelyx: Its amazing that Charlotte and Jacksonville beat out areas like St. Louis and Memphis.

Jacksonville, yeah I agree. But Charlotte seems to be doing just fine. In hindsight, the franchise that went to Jacksonville should have gone to Baltimore. In fact, now that I think about it, I really think it was a disgrace that J-ville got a team over Baltimore.

 
IAmRight [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 02:49:04 AM  
DiamondDave: You live within walking distance, don't have to pay $30-$40 to park, can eat and drink at home, get free tickets and it's STILL too much of a hassle to go to a game?

The Superdome sucks and is an ugly-ass place to watch a game from.

/is one of two NFL stadiums I have been in, the other not being an NFL stadium anymore (LA Coliseum)

 
Mr Guy 2009-11-06 11:59:42 AM  
I have YET to figure out why one of the big networks or ESPN hasn't worked out a pay per view system that's reasonable. Split the profits with the stadium and team, no black outs, and pick ANY game from any from that provider for a nominal fee.

My girlfriend is a Chargers fan but we live in North Carolina. We've missed two games that weren't shown at all locally on cable. I've missed college sports, pro football and basketball, and hockey games, just because I wasn't willing to pay for a giant packaged channel I don't give a flip about 90% of the content on.

I don't want to subscribe to the NFL Network, the NBA league pass, the NHL Center Ice, whatever the SEC/ACC/Big10/Pac10 channel is. I want to be able to say, right now, UCLA and Kansas are playing and they are having a good year. I'll pay a dollar to watch one of those instead of whatever stupid Conference USA game they are airing here. Why won't someone let me give them money to watch the games I want to watch, instead of the games they think I should watch?

 
dj_spanmaster 2009-11-06 12:32:37 PM  
InferiousX: Contemplating a move to Florida later in the winter. Jacksonville looks ideal. Any Jacksonville Fakers have some input?

Jax isn't bad - you could do a hell of a lot worse. But I say Pensacola has everything that's really desired out of life - better beaches, great musical venues, some culture, not too southern and not too northern. I don't know about the economy or real estate prices.

 
IAmRight [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 04:21:52 PM  
Mr Guy: just because I wasn't willing to pay for a giant packaged channel I don't give a flip about 90% of the content on.

You'd probably pay more for the 10% of the content you did care about via pay per view than you would for the 10% plus the 90% in its current form.

 
JoeCowboy 2009-11-06 04:55:07 PM  
PeopleSuck: Yes they did

no they didn't

JC

 
Farkin_Gator 2009-11-06 05:56:17 PM  
UNC_Samurai: Out of curiosity, what were the attendance rates in the 90's when Brunell was leading them to the playoffs?

Attendance during the 90's was at or near capactiy (73,000 at that time, usual attendance was between 60 and 70,000). Games were sold out for the first three years, single game tickets weren't available until 1999. The Jaguars didn't have a game blacked out until the 2001 season, and a couple more in '02 during Coughlin's last year.

The fans came back out to support Del Rio, but the last two years have been tough. The stadium is huge (76,000 seats) compared to some other places; doesn't matter - even covering up 10,000 seats the Jaguars still need to sell 57,000 "non-premium" (club) seats to avoid a blackout.

The economy here in Jacksonville is awful - unemployment is high and most of the well 'to do' locals are spending their football money in Gainesville to watch Tim Tebow.

As a Jaguars fan from day 1 (November 30, 1993), it's hard to watch the stink the Jaguars put on the field for road games (see Seattle game, Tennessee game for example) and then except to pay $$$ when they have a home game.

Del Rio is in the same position that Tom Coughlin was back in '02; he's lost the team, he's lost the town. He has to go if he can't steer this team to the post-season (and that is not going to happen).

 
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