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 by Ramifornia510
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   42  
 Joined:  Oct 13 2018
United States of America   Oakland, CA
Undrafted Free Agent

Now I'm really pissed. I just found my seats for sale on Ticket Exchange for $5,900. WTF!

 by DirtyFacedKid
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   974  
 Joined:  Oct 28 2016
United States of America   San Clemente
Veteran

My surf buddy is working the Super Bowl and he was told only about 60 or 70 winners won in the sweepstakes.

 by Hacksaw
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

So much for that incentive...

 by Elvis
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   41506  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

DirtyFacedKid wrote:My surf buddy is working the Super Bowl and he was told only about 60 or 70 winners won in the sweepstakes.


Damn.

 by Joe Pendleton
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   2148  
 Joined:  Jun 12 2021
Virgin Islands (USA)   LA Coliseum
Pro Bowl

so not cool (AT ALL).. PR move fm ticket marketing, wtf

 by Elvis
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   41506  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

https://www.latimes.com/sports/story/20 ... fi-stadium

Want to see Rams at Super Bowl? Hope you have thousands of dollars to spare

Image

BY BILL SHAIKINSTAFF WRITER
JAN. 31, 2022

The Los Angeles Rams have not won the Super Bowl, either in their current residency or in their first run in town. Now the Rams are in the 2022 Super Bowl, the game is at Sofi Stadium, and Los Angeles fans have a chance to witness history without getting on a plane.

Yes, you can be there. No, tickets are not sold out. And, gulp, this would put a dent in even the thickest of wallets.

The average ticket price on the free market, as of Monday morning: $10,540, according to TicketIQ.

You could spend that amount of money on four nights — Super Bowl weekend and Valentine’s Day on Monday! — on a suite at the Burj Al Arab in Dubai, often called “the most luxurious hotel in the world.” You could spend that amount on a box seat at Dodger Stadium — on the field level, for all 81 games. You could spend that amount on a double-double at In-N-Out every day for the next six years, with money left over for fries.

But this is the hometown team in the hometown Super Bowl, and you still want to go. The NFL, not the Rams, controls the supply of tickets. The NFL takes 25% of tickets for its use, some of which go to league officials, partners and sponsors, and some to On Location Experiences, a luxury ticket provider in which the NFL holds an ownership stake.

That is why the game is not sold out. Those luxury tickets are on sale, all with amenities from “elevated tailgate fare” to “top-shelf open bar and cuisine,” and with prices Monday ranging from $5,737 to sit in the upper deck to $36,125 to sit on the 50-yard line. Buy a package with four seats on the 50, add in the 18% “service fee” for tickets delivered to your phone, and the grand total comes to $166,498.

On Monday morning, StubHub listed four seats on the 50-yard line at $46,681 each. For four seats, the sale price was $234,814.69, including a service fee of $48,081.68 and a “fulfillment fee” of $8.

The On Location option essentially allows the NFL to control ticket inventory, said Jesse Lawrence, founder and chief executive of TicketIQ.

“They effectively are pricing the market,” Lawrence said.

Indeed, the cheapest ticket on the resale market Monday morning was priced at $5,663, according to TicketIQ, in line with the On Location pricing.

Before the inception of On Location, Lawrence said, fans could hope that brokers would dump tickets priced too highly onto the market on game day. Broker access has been limited by league sales and team restrictions.

The Rams will sell Super Bowl tickets to fans who paid more than $100,000 in Sofi Stadium seat license fees and will hold a lottery for all other season-ticket holders — but, the Rams warn on their website, “Tickets purchased through the Los Angeles Rams are not eligible for resale.”

Allocation of Super Bowl tickets
The NFL controls tickets for the Super Bowl. Here’s how they are divided per entity.
25% of Super Bowl tickets are allocated to the NFL, the greatest share of any one entity.

NFL 25%
Rams 18.5%
Bengals 18.5%
Chargers 3.1%
Other team 1.2%

The 29 teams besides the Rams, Bengals and Chargers receive a combined allotment of 34.9%.


The bottom line: Over the last four Super Bowls, Lawrence said, the best prices generally are available about a week before the game.

“You don’t want to wait until the last minute,” he said. “That is the worst strategy in the new era of buying tickets.”

The $10,540 average price, if it holds up, would be a Super Bowl record, according to TicketIQ data.

“This is, dollar and clout wise, going to be the biggest ticket in the history of live events,” former Ticketmaster chief executive Nathan Hubbard tweeted Sunday night.

Oh, and don’t forget parking. On Monday, the prices for Super Bowl parking passes on Vivid Seats ranged from $103 to $1,319.

 by Joe Pendleton
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   2148  
 Joined:  Jun 12 2021
Virgin Islands (USA)   LA Coliseum
Pro Bowl

lmfao.. so bakd rn:).. this is Capitalism at it's finest my peeps.. cheers!

 by 69RamFan
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   3591  
 Joined:  Oct 15 2016
United States of America   LA CA by way of NY/NJ
Superstar

Why would the Chargers get a percentage?
They don't own the stadium....
If anything, and owner of the stadium should get amount.
The Chargers should get the same amount as a regular team.

 by LARams_1963
3 years 4 months ago
 Total posts:   1194  
 Joined:  Aug 04 2016
United States of America   North Port, FL
Pro Bowl

Elvis wrote:Another question i have is if a certain amount of tickets are allocated to each team and tickets are allocated to the host stadium team, does that mean the Rams are getting 2 separate allocations?
I think it's irrelevant. We won the lottery in '18 and were of course ecstatic. We paid face value $1200 for our tickets. They were literally the worst seats imaginable in Mercedes Benz stadium. Furthermore, while at LAX getting ready to fly to Atlanta we were surrounded by Rams fans at the bar closest to our gate. I sat down next to a Rams Ticket Rep and we chatted about the lottery. The part that shocked me was that of the 8-12k tickets the Rams were alloted the number that actually went to SSL holders in the lottery was around 400. So.... only 400 SSL members had a shot at the crappiest seats for the game. Just seems sad and backwards.

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51 posts Jul 05 2025