December 12th, 2018 at 2:35 PM ^
Blame Title IX? Here we go...
December 12th, 2018 at 2:52 PM ^
That's right, Bando. Blame Title IX.
Title IX; going back to when Bo Schembechler and Don Canham went to Washington to testify on Capitol Hill, and meet with President Ford in the Oval Office, to beg them not to impose Title IX, turning college football into a revenue machine for general collegiate athletics.
Football coaching salaries have gotten huge, I know. It's a big problem, and I don't quite know how to deal with it. Rest assured that the fanboys on MGoBlog will be screaming online if Don Brown exits Michigan for a Temple job that will pay him more money. And that none of them will be complaining about the number of millions that Jim Harbaugh is making.
But beyond that, if anyone wants to complain about where all of the football revenue is going, it is going in large part to other sports including the sorts of non-revenue sports mentioned in the post above that I was responding to.
Absolutely, positively; it is an excellent time to think about Title IX (among other things) when we get news of (what I thought we'd agree on) an offensive price increase for Michigan season tickets. I cannot think of a better time to mention Title IX.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:45 PM ^
lol. football scholarships cost maybe $5-6 million per year. that's nothing.
December 12th, 2018 at 1:30 PM ^
Because some MGoBlog readers are not donors/season ticket holders and will not get the email from Warde Manuel, I am going to post the full text of his message here.
****
Dear Season Ticket Holder,
Thank you for your continued support of Michigan Athletics as a football season ticket holder and donor. Your support played a critical role in a fantastic 10-win season and #7 ranking. We’re looking forward to seeing many of you in Atlanta for the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on December 29th and cheering on this fine group of student-athletes one more time.
In addition to your support on gameday, your financial commitment to our 900 student-athletes across 29 programs provides nearly 20 percent of our annual operating budget, providing resources to our student-athletes such as scholarships, academic services, and access to the top-of-the-line facilities.
At the close of 2017, a federal tax law was passed impacting the Preferred Seat Donation program. As we communicated back in December of 2017, one of the changes from this bill (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act) was ending the ability to deduct 80 percent of charitable contributions attached to the purchase of season tickets, or in our case specifically, the Preferred Seat Donation program. In light of the new legislation, the program will continue as it has in years past and will now be referred to as a Preferred Seat Contribution (PSC).
You may now log in and pay your 2019 football Preferred Seat Contribution by the deadline of January 31, 2019 at mgoblue.com/psc. New, beginning in 2019, PSC renewals for Men’s Basketball and Ice Hockey will now take place later this spring and will be due by May 31. Donors who make their football Preferred Seat Contribution(s) by the deadline will be able to renew their season tickets beginning March 16.
When you log in, you will notice that PSC’s have increased slightly from 2018. The increase ranges from 2.5 to 5.5 percent depending upon seat location. Season tickets will also be increasing for 2019 by approximately five percent. Please know that Michigan Athletics is committed to keeping PSC’s and season tickets at this level for both 2019 and 2020.
These increases have been made in an effort to maintain our status as a leader in college athletics by supporting our student-athletes in the most comprehensive ways and continuing our tradition of financial stability. For more information and the full PSC and season ticket pricing structure, please visit: 2019 Preferred Seat Contribution Information.
As a department we are responsible for paying all costs associated with the athletics scholarships, which will total more than $27 million in 2018/19. Michigan is proud to be one of just a handful of financially self-sustaining departments in the country. We do not draw funds from the University’s general fund or from the state of Michigan. This level of stability would not be possible without the success of the PSC program.
The impact of your investment through the PSC is wide ranging and will continue to be the cornerstone upon which the success of our student-athletes rests by providing the resources to produce champions on and off of the fields of play.
Thank you in advance for your continued investment in the success of Michigan Athletics. Wishing you a Happy Holiday and a fantastic 2019.
Go Blue!
Warde Manuel
December 12th, 2018 at 1:31 PM ^
ah thanks; I should have probably done that in the OP
December 12th, 2018 at 1:55 PM ^
They're out of their fucking minds with those prices, especially with PSD's not being deductible anymore. It's just not worth it to watch us lose to OSU every year. Maybe if we were Alabama the price would be justifiable.
But until people stop renewing their tickets, you can expect the price to keep going up every two years.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:09 PM ^
It's very sad..... A beloved member of our lives has changed drastically and we are dragging our feet on the way out.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:12 PM ^
They've just about priced the regular middle class family out of the stadium. Good going.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:28 PM ^
Michigan Football, for the incredibly rich and/or the incredibly stupid. HAIL
December 12th, 2018 at 2:18 PM ^
They’re really taking this Co-B1G East Champs thing seriously huh?
December 12th, 2018 at 2:22 PM ^
Seriously considering dropping my tickets as well. I would guess that I can buy tickets on the secondary market for the games I want to attend for much cheaper than the whole cost of my three season tickets. Tough decision to make, but as it is now I can't make all the games anyway. So what's the point of holding onto my tickets if I can still go to the games of my choice for a much cheaper whole price than the whole season ticket price.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:22 PM ^
Gave mine up after the 2017 season and I don’t regret it. Michigan is never getting past OSU anyway. Was able to go to the Wisconsin game this season after my Dad got some free tickets at the last minute.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:24 PM ^
Yea, I've got a kid on the way and this is going to be way too expensive.
Probably going to pass, unlike our offense.
December 12th, 2018 at 10:05 PM ^
It's funny cause it's true.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:32 PM ^
This 100% guarantees that I will not be getting season tickets next year. I'm on the fence every year (or every other year with the stupid BIG scheduling) but calling my decision made quite early this time.
This is a ballsy move by the AD.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:42 PM ^
This is a total smack in the face for me.
--Athletic Dept. is projecting a $2.5M budget surplus for FY2019 (7/1/18-6/30/19), on top of the $2.5M surplus they expected for FY2018.
--The University just purchased Fingerle, ostensibly to further expand the Athletic Campus.
--I received no less than a dozen phone calls and emails *begging me* to purchase 2018-2019 season basketball tickets.
--I give a substantial portion of my paycheck back to the University to help fund vital programs for undergrads, staff, and programs that do enormous good on a shoestring budget.
--The Athletic Dept. was totally unwilling to work with me at the start of the season when I asked to add 2 football tickets to the current 2 I've had for 10 years, which are the nosebleediest of nosebleed seats in Section 6.
Yet, they continue to send these hat-in-hand emails with a subtext that if I don't suck it up, I'll be depriving some poor kid of an education.
I'm struggling to come up with enough on the "Pro" side of the ledger to outweigh the ~$3-4K price tag and the other items on the "Con" side.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:57 PM ^
Well said! The university is a bottomless money pit yet they continue to gauge the common fan. The only way to fight back is to stop going.
December 12th, 2018 at 3:24 PM ^
I too am getting annoyed with the constant solicitations for donations. The endowment is well over $10 billion. Go bother Stephen Ross and Larry Page. I'm tapped out.
December 12th, 2018 at 2:52 PM ^
As my UofM Public Relations degree taught me, timing is everything, as I explained to Warde in my email to him just now.
Raising the prices less than a month after your brand shit the bed for the eleventy billiointh year in a row, coupled with the increased price we were already going to pay for three premium games in one year, and a non-conference schedule that makes it not worth the expense to get to the game is #PRFAIL.
Add on $15 for a hot dog and water, sweating to death in a climate-changed September that feels more like mid-summer, that damned rock music, and the idiot red hat guy who doubles the time games take, and I feel like they should be paying me to take tickets.
That being said, I'll renew this year. Next year is another story....
December 12th, 2018 at 3:00 PM ^
On the other hand.....
Dropping this story now does take away from the "Don Brown is leaving to go to a no name place" story. And is better than dropping those in reverse order.
December 12th, 2018 at 4:38 PM ^
Respectfully I say to you that "public relations" -- pro or con -- had nothing to do with this timing. Every year the timing is the same. Give PSC payers an option to pay the newly-dictated amounts in the current calendar year, or the next. They need to get the PSC payments accounted for, before they send out the season ticket applications in the early spring.
It's just the way it goes. Like death and taxes.
I don't disagree with your appraisal of the optics. But there was no choice on timing, and anybody in the Athletic Department will tell you the same.
December 12th, 2018 at 9:56 PM ^
While that may have been true in the past, the fact that they're not deductible anymore (save for probably the businesses that are paying for those $90K PSD suites, cuz you know they didn't lose their tax deductions), what calendar year you pay them in is no longer relevant. May have sat better with a little more time after OSU, and a bowl win under our belts (she says optimistically.....)
December 12th, 2018 at 3:48 PM ^
It will be interesting to see if the latest loss to OSU impacts ticket sales. I know of few recent games that seemed to be as painful to the fan base as this loss.
December 12th, 2018 at 4:24 PM ^
I've already decided to stop investing in tickets for football. If I'm spending money on tickets, travel from Indy, hotel, going out to bars and dinner, etc., then I'm spending it to go to basketball games.
For the past 17 years I have traveled to Ann Arbor for at least 2 football games and 2 basketball games per year. It will only be basketball from now on. It's my favorite sport anyway.
December 12th, 2018 at 4:24 PM ^
Anyone who is interested in giving your tickets to me via transfer, let me know.
December 12th, 2018 at 8:09 PM ^
I know this is funding all other sports, but if there is a surplus like last year, why raise prices?
Some of us are middle class without unlimited discretionary funds
December 12th, 2018 at 10:58 PM ^
December 13th, 2018 at 12:14 PM ^
Oh we'll complain about the increased cost and mourn the loss of being able to deduct the PSD (now C) but we'll still shove the benjamins across the table and attend the games.
At some point though the thrill of the experience (even after all this time going) will get outweighed by continued price increases that are in excess of wage increases and two tickets in a blue area will be open for the first time in nearly a generation.
I guess in the end it'll come down to whether the angst about not being there subsides.
December 14th, 2018 at 8:20 AM ^
True...but our family has gone from 8 to 4 season tickets because of price increases. The rest of the fam who wants to go to the game just buys tickets on the secondary market. The family we tailgate with no longer has season tickets....they had 6 and now just buy on the secondary market.
People will say "if UM is good you will pay out the ass on the secondary market". Few notes; 1) you can almost always find them for slightly over face value and 2) the "bad" games are still cheap. No matter how good UM is you should be able to find half the home games for UNDER face value.
3 of next years 7 home games you will be able to be decent to good tickets for $15-$40. So even if you overpay for ND/OSU/MSU you will save on those other games. Even Iowa you will be able to find at or under face value.
December 14th, 2018 at 8:15 AM ^
Wonder if UM will ever consider cutting sports? At some point why not look at cutting things like field hockey, cross country, tennis, swimming and diving, golf, track and field, gymnastics etc.
There are probably 30ish varsity sports at UM? You will have to cut mens sports as well to abide by Title IX. Hell eastern michigan cutting 4 sports is saving $2.5 million.
Even if Michigan is not at that breaking point yet I'd have to assume this conversation has taken place, even preliminarily. I'd think any university would want to consider getting down to more of the 17-20 total varsity sport range.
And yes...I have personal experience here. Went to BG to run track. Track was cut freshman year. So I know personally what this is like.