Showing posts with label Badgers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Badgers. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2008

Badger Athletic Ticket Office Corrects Some Flaws, but Is Still Missing the Point


Today, the Badger student population received an email from the Wisconsin Athletic Ticket Office informing us that they are changing the system for distributing student season football tickets in several major ways. If you're a Badger football fan, you probably already know the changes well enough to have reacted to them with more than a few expletives; otherwise you probably don't care and should stop reading this post unless you're really bored or something. It's pretty long.

Here's a summary of the main changes to the student ticket distribution process as explained on the Badger Athletics website:

(1). All student tickets will now be distributed by lottery.
(2). Student tickets will no longer be mailed, and must now be picked up from the Athletic Ticket Office between August 18th and September 19th.
(3). Students will no longer be assigned a specific seat, and will now be issued a wristband simply granting them access to a "specific section area" (i.e. M, N, O, P).
(4). Section P is no longer exclusive to upper-classmen.

While I can't say I completely approve of them, changes (2)-(4) to the distribution policy are all understandable, at least in part.

Lets start with change (2) (students must pickup tickets, rather than having their vouchers mailed to them). While I never personally had issues receiving my football tickets in the mail, it's more than reasonable to postulate that mass-mailing 10,000+ sets of tickets creates a number of problems. Students purchasing tickets can give a wrong address, resulting in the tickets being sent somewhere besides their intended destination. The Ticket Office also inevitably loses the tickets of a few students in the mailing process, due simply to the sheer volume of tickets they have to handle. Finally, mailing tickets to students incurs postage and labor costs which are eliminated by making students pick up their own tickets.

On a basic level, I agree with the Ticket Office's decision to make we, the students pick up our own football tickets. This policy solves a number of problems and puts the responsibility for having tickets by the start of the season (August 30 vs. Akron) in the hands of the students who will be using the tickets. If you really care about seeing all the games, you'll make sure to get your tickets before kickoff of the first game. If you're one of those people who spends the entire first quarter drinking and usually shows up sometime halfway through the second quarter, you'll likely miss at least the first game.

Still, the Ticket Office's pickup schedule is flawed. August 18 is too late a date to open the voucher pickup process. A better date to start the process would be August 13, the day before most leases in Madison expire. Many students come to Madison for the move on August 14th/15th and then return home to continue working or whatever else might need to be done at home until shortly before the school year starts. Starting the voucher pickup process on the 13th would make it easy for such students to swing by the Athletic Ticket Office on the day before or after their move to their new apartment, house, etc. to pick up their football tickets.

While I'm not saying that moving the date back to August 13 from August 18 will necessarily have a significant impact on this, the Ticket Office better have a good plan in place for distributing a large amount of tickets on August 30, the day of the first home game. College students have a generally high moment of inertia when it comes to fulfilling obligations (i.e. doing papers the night before their due). The result of this high moment of inertia will be swaths of students who haven't picked up their tickets prior to the first game. This opening gameday rush will only be compounded by the fact that the top priority for many students upon returning to Madison is seeing friends who they may not have seen all summer, not picking up football tickets. Basically, the Ticket Office better be on point and ready to deal with liquored up students trying to pick their tickets up on August 30.

Change (3) (wristbands guaranteeing access to a section rather than a specific seat) makes the most sense of all the changes and I take no issue with it. Being merely granted access to a general section was already the de facto system, at least in the three seasons I've been attending Badger football games in the student section. Students arriving early to games will still be able to claim the near-field seats they covet.

The wristband system also alleviates a problem which affected a group of my friends last year. They arrived at a game only to find the seats on their tickets occupied, so, not being assholes, they moved to the best available seats within their section. Sometime during the second quarter another group of students arrived demanding to sit in the exact seat numbers listed on their tickets, which my friends now occupied. After my friends refused and told the contesting group to "deal," the contesting group returned to their seats with a police officer, who promptly made my friends move. However, when my friends asked the officer to take them to the seats promised on their tickets, he refused, not wanting to start a never ending chain of moving students around to their actual seats. As result, my friends were forced even higher in the section. The old system simply wasn't just for that reason, and the new wristband system fixes that problem.

Change (4) (Section P no longer exclusively upper-classman) is largely inconsequential, unless you're an upper-classman who really cares about being surrounded exclusively by other upper-classmen. I've had upper-classman tickets for the past two seasons and have yet to sit in Section P, so it could just be me, but I don't feel like change (4) is ultimately very important.

If you've made it through the prior 939 words then you've made it long enough to hear my ultimate complaint, which lies both with and, in a sense, beyond Change (1) (all student tickets awarded by lottery). Before I get to my major complaint, I must first remark that the size of the student section increased to 14,000 for the 2008-2009 season, from 10,500 in prior seasons, which is a step in the direction I desire.

However, even with the increased number of available student tickets, the lottery system is fundamentally flawed. Under the new lottery system, 2,000 football tickets are guaranteed to each year, freshman through senior, with 500 tickets allocated to graduate students, and the remaining 5,500 granted by a lottery where seniors have four chances to win, juniors three, sophomores two, and freshman a single chance to win.

The number of tickets each class receives is besides the ultimate point I'm trying to make, however. Every Wisconsin college student who wants to attend Wisconsin college football games should be able to do so. The lottery will probably allocate student tickets more fairly than the previous system, but even this revised system is inherently unfair because there are students who want football tickets who are unable to receive them.

I know that student tickets are priced at a face value which is well below their actual value in the resale market. Therefore, there is an incentive for the Athletic Department to sell as few student tickets as will prevent controversy. Selling more of the significantly higher priced non-student season tickets results in greater profits for the Athletic Department, and profits seem to be their ultimate goal. I'm arguing that the experience of Badger students (a non-market value), for and from whom the Badger football team exists, should be more important than the Athletic Departments' desire to capture higher profits.

As much as I hate to hold the [goddamn] Univeristy of Michigan up as any kind of standard, the Wolverines distribute their student football tickets in a better manner than the University of Wisconsin-Madison currently does, or for that matter, ever did. Every Michigan student who wants season football tickets can have them, so long as he or she applies during a specified registration period. What I propose is for the UW Athletic Department to change the student football ticket lottery registration period of June 15-30, to an outright student football ticket registration period in the light of Michigan's. Under my alternative systen, if you are a UW student attending UW during the fall semester and you register (and pay) for tickets between June 15 and June 30, you will have tickets when football season comes around. I know Camp Randall doesn't have the benefit of holding 110,000+ fans like Michigan's "Big House" does, but I feel our 80,500 seats could adequately accommodate all UW students who want to attend games, and enough "general" Badger fans to make everyone happy.


NOTE 1: I recognize that completely overhauling the student football ticket distribution system will create major disturbances in the short run ticket market, especially with regards to the existing "general" season ticket holders and the student ticket resale market. I don't really want to get into that right now because that would another 1,500 words worth of analysis. Just know that in the long run, allowing all students desiring season football tickets to have them would improve the Badger football experience more than it detracted from it, in my opinion. Perhaps I'll post what I would expect to happen should the Athletic Ticket Department change to my proposed system tomorrow, when I have more time, motivation.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

This Year's Badger Basketball Themed "READ" Poster Not As Good as Last Year's Badger Basketball Team Themed "READ" Poster



Last year's poster is on top, this year's on the bottom. Sorry the quality on this year's picture is a little crunchy, there's no online pictures of it that I could find, so this is a cameraphone representation of the poster. I picked it up from the front desk at College Library. I don't know if they have it at other libraries, but I would imagine they have to. I think the "READ" themed poster is to promote the American Library Association's National Library Week, which is from April 12-18 this year. Julie Andrews of Marry Poppins fame is this year's Honorary Chair.

Getting back to the 2008 Big Ten Champion Badger basketball team endorsed "READ" poster, my complaint with this year's poster is they gave Coach Bo Ryan, and from left to right Joe Krabbenhoft, Jason Bohannan, Marcus Landry, Brian Butch, and Trevon Hughes a much "realer" book that was afforded Alando Tucker last year. I can't say I've read Alando's Book, Professional Sports Team Histories: BASKETBALL but I can say with a more than reasonable amount of certainty that BASKETBALL is below the reading level of the modern college student. BASKETBALL seems like the kind of book a kid who likes sports would do a 7th grade book report on. At the same time, the book isn't really fair to Alando Tucker since he's not the dumbass college athlete he ends up being portrayed as on the poster. He graduated with a degree in Life Science Communications from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I don't know how "real" a major Life Science Communications is but it most certainly carries with it a more strenuous course load than the football team's major of choice, Agricultural Journalism, so you have to give him some credit. I don't imagine there are that many other First Team All-Americans who actually graduate like Alando did either.

This year's book, Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero, seems to be more on the level of the college students holding them. Still, it doesn't have the charm of BASKETBALL because it doesn't drive home the same "I'm a basketball player and I like reading books about basketball!" message since it's not about basketball on any level. It's still a fine poster, just not a classic.

Bonus: After searching the UW library system via MadCat I could only locate four copies of Clemente, two of the 2006 edition, and two of the 2007 edition. You'll notice that there are six copies of the book in the poster. This means that at least two the books in the picture could not have been from the University of Wisconsin-Madison library system.

Three of the UW's copies are located in College Library, one in the Main Collection, Room 3191, one in Open Book Sports and Fitness, Room 1250, and one in Ethnic Studies, Room 1193. The last is in the Historical Society stacks. Two copies call number status's are "Not Checked Out" and the other two are "In Process" as of March 7. I wonder if people saw the poster and decided to check out the book in response. It can't be a coincidence that they're "in process" right after the poster came out.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Michigan State is Ugly, Badgers Play Pretty




Michigan State has some formidably unattractive players, no Romo. It's pretty remarkable. I thought the Badger's big white guys were ugly. When your star center is noted for looking like a polar bear and his backup is noted for looking like something worse than a polar bear, you would think thats about as ugly as you could get. Michigan State's centers manage to overcome some long odds to out ugly Brian Butch and Greg Stiemsma. Next to Goran Suton and Drew Naymick, Butch and Stiemsma look like David Beckham and Matthew fucking Mcconaughey, no Romo.

The only things balancing out the dreadful aura of ugly on the floor was the Badgers excruciatingly efficient play on both sides of the ball, and of course the always lovely Erin Andrews. The Badgers committed a school record single turnover as they held the Spartans to 42 points on 35% shooting. Butch led the way for the Badgers with 16 points, managing to hit, as Dick Vitale would refer to them, "four trifectas, baby," despite resembling a member of another species.

During a lull in the game Bret Musburger, who was calling the game, refered to Erin Andrews as the "person everybody wants to see on YouTube" and the real star of the crew. To this Andrews responded, "You're the star Brent, I've been wearing sunglasses all day."

At this point in time Musburger went off on a tangent about the Nitty Gritty and how the previous night there had been 53 birthday's there, and there was beer and hamburgers. Based on this I'm guessing that the ESPN crew had been out at the Nitty knocking back a few with Badger fans. Well perhaps more than a few if Andrews needed to wear her sunglasses all day. That's quite a hangover Erin.

Is there anyone who was at the Nitty last night who may have seen Erin Andrews and/or Brent Musburger or any of the rest of the ESPN crew there? I know readership isn't very big, but it would be cool to confirm that she was there.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Badgers Again Ranked Highly Pre-Preseason


The Badgers are again picked to finish highly in both the Big-10 and overall in the way before the season starts polls on ESPN.com. To be specific, the Badgers are ranked second in the Big-10 behind those perennial assholes at Ohio State and 13th in the country. I take this to mean that ESPN.com is predicting that OSU is going to get to the National Championship game only to lose for the third consecutive season, leaving the Badgers to get rolled by USC in the Rose Bowl like Illinois did after entering the Rose Bowl ranked 13th in both polls last season. Hopefully the Badgers are moving in the direction Zach Brown in pointing in the above picture.

Going to the Rose Bowl would be pretty much the most awesome thing ever setting aside L.A. being a soulless jungle of freeways. I suppose that's why they play the game in Pasadena. I'm tired of the Second Rate Bowl Presented by Capital One which we didn't even bother to get to this past season. A trip to the Rose Bowl would be a fine way to round off my final year at UW-Madison, since football is inevitably more important than academics.

Bonus: Michigan is slated to finish fifth in the Big-10. Whats good now, you fancy coach having bitches?