McPeachy said:
Wyovanian said:
McPeachy said:
Just had a few thoughts...Laramie, is basically a town of 20,000 people (yes the census includes the student population). When the students aren't in town (Semester break, Summer, etc.), Laramie is the size of Sheridan, but poorer.
And posters on this board expect 1/4 of that population to be regular basketball season ticket holders? That's ridiculous. Also given the fact that probably another 1/4 of the population lives at poverty or similar level, it becomes even more evident how ridiculous it is.
In order for Wyoming basketball to have great attendance, Cheyenne is the community that really needs to step up. Oh, and when the students are back in Laramie, they need to step up too. Just some thoughts.
Um, how was it then, back in 1986-89 we could draw 12-14K per game with around 9,000 fewer people? Are you saying the town we grew up in, without college students only had about 14,000 residents?
There are many reasons attendance was higher (not sure it was the 14K per game range you stated). Primarily though, if you don't change - you gonna be changed.
A partial list of 15 off the top of my head thoughts to digest (not spending a whole lot on it):
1. No internet / interweb
2. No cell phones - just pay phones
3. Limited TV - if any for sports
4. Cost of ticket ($6.00 was the adult face value I remember - season's were $60 I think)
5. Community involvement - UW & Laramie were butt buddies
6. Casper Shootout
6a. Casper played a big role in home attendance in Laramie
7. bWHYu, Utah, UTEP
8. Paul Roach
9. UW Football
10. Drinking Age was 19
11. Student Choices of Activities were far less
12. The newness of the AA
13. Kids under 12 were $2 (building a future fanbase)
14. Thursday - Saturday Tilts (that way people attend 2 for 1 day missed working)
15. JD's Burger Joint (oh, and TD's / The Pub)
Those are all valid possibilities, but the primary ones that jump out at me are TV and the internet. Throw in the lack of adult beverage at the venue, and the reasons become pretty obvious.
But I guess I was taking more issue with your assertion about Laramie's population too- I've asked census workers a few times how towns like Laramie are counted. They said that the bulk of census activity tends to occur over the summer and pointed out that census forms and interviews are set up to count full-time residents. Most college students who return to their respective home towns or otherwise leave town during the summer are generally not counted, but if they end up in their school town during the census, are, by virtue of the process, NOT counted as part of the population. Having spent plenty of time in towns ranging from nearly 2M to 2K,
I can honestly say that Laramie's official population is pretty spot-on. And when the students are in town, it's closer to 40K.
Now, as far as Laramie and UW's relationship in the mid-80's, I remember some pretty rough road, especially after the UP closed up shop and UW started flexing its political muscles a bit more. LPD were notoriously hard on students back then to the point of being investigated by DCI over several allegations that were corroborated by UPD.
The 19-year-old drinking age might be a bit of an issue insofar as the underclassmen might be loathe to venture into a public space for fear of being arrested for underage drinking, however with no alcohol sales at the AA, if the drinking age was 19, they might be more inclined to head to the bars or party at home these days.
Get UW sports off of TV in UW's live footprint and attendance will increase. That's the short-term fix. Enhance the live game experience with in-stadium apps such as replay, scorekeeping, in-game competitions via social apps, in-seat concessions, better choices of food, adult beverages, and better cross-marketing, offers, and benefits- that's the medium term solution. Finally, a winning tradition driven by expectations of excellence- that's the long-term fix.