Solutions to Arsenal’s ticket problem

All season, Arsenal have had ticketing issues. This peaked with the Wolves game as the silver allocation sold out within 5 minutes.

So what are the issues? And what are the possible solutions?

Supply and demand

The single biggest issue. There are simply too many people going and not enough tickets.

There are around 8-8,500 tickets that go on sale every home game, split across silvers and red members. Getting tickets as a silver has not really been a problem prior to this season. The expected, the demand for tickets has increased alongside Arsenal’s improved performance.

And it is not much of a surprise with us being in pole position to win our first league title in 19 years that the Wolves game sold out so quickly.

Supply and demand is an issue that all events face. And demand seems to have increased since Covid19.

In 2021, 170,000 tickets for Liam Gallagher at Knebworth sold out in minutes. The 200,000 tickets available for Glastonbury 2023 sold it in around an hour.

Anyone that has ever been to gigs, concerts, festivals, cricket, boxing, darts and more will know how quickly these events sell out. And how it is a milatery with your mates and mutiple devices to try and get tickets.

For 5 years before Covid, I was always able to get tickets for the first day at the Oval for the September test. 4 of us usually enter the ballot for tickets. We failed to get tickets for either 2022 or 2023.

Gallagher sells out 170,000 tickets within minutes. So no surprise the silver allocation (around 3,000 tickets), sells out in minutes.

People often pick and chose what they want to go to.

They want to go to Spurs away, but do not want to do Stoke or Middlesbrough to build up their credits. they want to do Chelsea at home, but have no interest in Burnley or Bolton at home.

The better we are, the better the opponent, the higher the demand is.

Solution: Build a bigger stadium.

I have seen some say that the Emirates is not fit for purpose, that we need to expand to 70,000. But it was only 12 months ago that many games went on general sale, and some failed to sell out.

Is the problem that the stadium is not big enough? Or is it that it is not big enough when we are top of the league? I do wonder where the demand was last season when we were 8th last season. And if the current demand would dramatically reduce if we were 8th next season.

Solution: Home credits

I have seen some argue that home credits could be a solution, rewarding those that go to more games.

Whilst good in theory, I think this will just make home games more of a closed shop. See the complaints about the away credit system as Exhibit A.

Home credits will not resolve the issues of 30,000 silver fans going for ~1500-2000 tickets. It will just see the same people going time and again, building their credits. And those at the bottom of the tree will have no chance of a ticket.

Solution: Reward longevity

Some older fans often complain about how long they have been a member, and how that counts for nothing. That they should have priority for having their silver membership for 20 years over someone who has had it for 6 years.

Longevity does not necassirly equate to loyalty.

Is a silver member who has had their membership for 20 years, but only goes to one game a season, more deserving of tickets than a lad who has had his members for 2 years, but been to 40 games in that period?

Solution: Increase silver allocation

The silver membership numbers has been capped at a consistent level thoughout our time at the Emirates (30,000), but our red membership has grown dramatically this season, up over 50%.

I remember when they first created the silver and red members. Silver got 100% of the available tickets and reds would only get a ticket if there were any left. Then reds got 500 tickets, them 1000 and now 3500 with the allocation for silvers reduced every time.

As a silver, during these periods, it was unlikely that you would be unable to get a ticket if you missed a game.

More recently,, the club made the decision to further reduce the tickets available to silvers and increase the red allocation upto 3,500 per game. This season reds with a Junior Gunner could book via the phone during the silver sale.

The club made this decision to try and make the red memberships more attractable when introducing the cheaper digital memberships. By creating more tickets available at this level, it saw more fans upgrade to red. But it dramatically reduced what was available to silver memberships.

A return to the previous system where 500 tickets are put aside for red members, with the rest going to silvers feels fair.

You have to be a red for 15+ years to get a silver. At that point, no one can really question another fans loyalty or longevity.

Solution: Ban multiple memberships, one name

I had a silver membership prior to getting my season ticket.

When I got my season ticket, I did not have to relenquish my silver as they were not connected. that meant I had both a gold and silver membership. I also had a 2nd silver that was in my fathers game that I usually let mates use who were not silvers – these were the early 00s when I was still at university.

I got rid of both my silvers about 10-years ago. It was pointless paying £50 for two memberships that I just did not use (now over £100 for both). But I wonder how amny gold season tickets still have a silver members that they (potentially) sell on game by game.

Moving to “one membership, one name” would reduce how many fans have silver memberships, and should therefore reduce the demand.

But what for those father and sons that share the same name? The club will have to be careful.

Likewise, what for those dads who have passed their silvers onto their kids, who in turn have not had their own red memberships. I bet there are plenty of 20-somethings that have been going for a decade on their dads silver who would then have to drop to the bottom of the list.

Maybe the club could do a “name amnesity” like they did with gold members? Allow season ticket holders to pass their silver memberships onto someone else, changing the name, for one summer only. This would also allow fans to add middle names to their membership, distinguishing sons from their fathers.

Then anyone that still has two memberships (or more) in the same name gets their secondary memberships cancelled. But will this really resolve anything if everyone just passes their silver onto someone else and change the name?

Solution: Use it or lose it

We have seen the club introduce a “use it or lose it” system with season ticket in an attempt to ensure tickets (or the TX) are being used as much as possible. This is a positive move but does not actually free up many tickets.

Could the club implement similar for silver members?

The primary reason to have a silver membership is priority tickets.

Maybe the club could introduce that if you do not use your silver a minimum of 5 times over the course of 2 full seasons, then you get downgraded to red.

Some might see this as unfair, but what is unfair is that fans that have stayed away during our bad times have suddenly reappeared now we are good again.

The “I will never go to a game whilst Wenger is in charge” fans did not come back under Unai Emery. Nor did they show their faces in those first Arteta years. but top of the league with 10o game to go? They are trying to get tickets again

Use it or lose it is always controversial.

There could be a reason a fan has rarely used their silver membership for a few years – illness, working abroad, financial constraints. And it would risk punishing a fan who has maybe been to 100s of games over 18 years all because they were unable to go for a couple of years.

It could be using a sledgehammer to break a nut.

Touting

I am a big believer that touting is not the big issue some fans see it as.

Yes, it exists, but my theory is we are talking about a couple of 100 tickets ending up in the hands of touts, not 1000s.

Touted tickets merely get the headlines due to the screenshots of high ticket prices shared across social media. But just because one ticket is up for sale for £28,000, does not mean there are lots of them.

If you see 1000s of tickets available for sale across mutiple websites, it is probably the same few tickets posted across mutiple sites.

I recently posted a double bed for sale. I put it on Facebook Marketbplace, Next Door and eBay. Three listings, one bed.

Online touts are probably putting a single ticket across multiple sites including Twitter. So what looks like 1000s of tickets available is probably only a coiuple of hundred.

Touting is a problem every event faces, and if there was an easy solution, one would have already have been found. But the club can not jsut turn a blind eye. They need to do something.

Solution: Buy tickets, cancel memberships

For some time, the club has bought tickets off the black market and then cancelled memberships. Over 2,000 memberships have been cancelled this season due to offences.

Whilst this might seem like a simple solution, there is nothing stopping a tout going straight back online and buying a new membership. As quickly as you cancel a membership, a new one is bought.

It reminds me of how the police deal with drug dealing.

As long as no violence is involved, they often turn a blind eye to low level drug dealing. They know if they plunder resources into and crack down and imprison dealers, others will quickly replace them.

Touting is the same. Cancel one membership, another will be bought to replace. And all the club ends up doing is spending more and more resources without ever actually changing anything.

I guess the hope is that if you keep cancelling memberships, eventually the coast of a new membership will begin to outweigh the benefit of touting and that individual will stop.

Solution: ID check on new memberships

One solution could be to force an ID check for new membership applications.

This would allow the club to reference new members against those that have previously had their membership cancelled, and block their application.

But this also risks blocking fans who do not have a driving license or passport – and having spent nearly 2 decades in recruitment, these people do exist.

Also, you can not expect the club’s membership team to be experts on spotting fake IDs. We are a global club with a global fan base. It would not be hard for a tout to get hold of lots of cheap, fake IDs (do not even have to be good quality) and set up Gmail addresses in their names.

As it will be copies of IDs and not hard copies, providing fakes would be very, very easy.

Solution: New membershup cooling off period

You go online to buy a ticket off a tout, or meet one in the pub, they get you to set up a digital membership that they can then transfer the ticket to.

A solution could be that a new membership can not have a ticket transferred to it until it has been live for 30 days. This would stop a chap from China coming to the UK on holiday, deciding to go to a game the next day, buying a membership and getting a ticket.

You stop the demand, you stop the supply. A good idea, but one that has a few pitfuls.

The idea of the digitial membership was to allow fans to transfer tickets at late notice to a mate when they suddenly could not go due to other commitements.

A cooling off period would stop you waking up on a Tuesday morning feeling ill, calling a mate to pass the ticket through, that mate quickly getting themselves a membership, transferring the ticket and going to the game that evening.

And touts will always move quicker then the club. They will just set up digital memberships ahead of time and sell the log in details to that membership along with the match ticket. An easy work around.

The website

One problem a lot of fans faced was the website crashing due to the demand. This happens on many ticketting platforms and is a consequence of a high demand.

Lads with 4 browsers open contribute to the problem. And if there are 4 of you all going for 4 tickets with 4 browsers open, that could be 16 people in the queue. Mutiple that by the 30,000 silver members and Arsenal could well see close to 100,000 “people” attempting to buy tickets, and crashing the system.

To get tickets for Gallagher at Knebworth, I was on two laptops, my iPad and two mobile phones. 5 devices. I was part of the problem when the system crashed.

Solution: Invest in a better platform

My understanding is the club are investing in the ticketing platform.

Liverpool reportedly had similar issues with the same platform earlier in the year and acted quickly. Our response has perhaps been a little to slow.

Whilst the new platford should see less crashes, it does not resolve the supply / demand issue.

Hopefully a new platform would also do a better job blocking those bots that tlouts use.


Summary: The ticketing issues at Arsenal are complex, and a solution is not easy.

The club have been warned by fans about these issues for some time, and as we close in on the end of the season the issues have increase.

There is a lot of work that can be done to limit touting, but this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to tickets.

The main issue is supply and demand. We either increase the supply of tickets, or reduce the demand. The only way we reduce the demand is by being worse on the pitch.

I would go back to increasing the allocation of silver members, reducing those available for red. Silver is the priority. I would also look into a “use it or lose it” system to ensure those fareweather fans who are not bothered about going when we are average, do not get the priority of a silver when we are good again.

What do you think?

Keenos

Arsenal are no bottlers as we become only top 4 team to take points at Anfield

Liverpool 1-0 Manchester City
Liverpool 2-1 Newcastle
Liverpool 7-0 Manchester United
Liverpool 2-2 Arsenal

Yes, to go 2-nil up at Anfield only to be pegged back to 2-2, conceeding in the 87th minute does feel like a defeat. But in the cold light of day, with the alcohol out of my system, I think it is a point gained.

After our draw to Liverpool, pundits and opposing fans have come together to claim that “Arsenal bottled the league at Anfield”.

Liverpool had the others in the top 4 at home this season – Manchester City, Newcastle and Manchester United. We were the only team to take a point off them and were so, so close to taking all 3.

So if we bottled the league by drawing at Anfield, what have City done losing there? And have Newcastle and Manchester United bottled top 4 by also losing? No. “Bottlers” is something that the press and opposing fans have been desperate to label Arsenal as.

I have written numerous times that in my book, Manchester City are favourites. No-one had us down as title challengers before the season begun. so I am not sure how we are now bottlers when we are battling for a title that no one expected us to be challenging for?

Yes, 8 points clear with 9 games to go looked a huge gap, but it really was not.

If we do not win the league, and in the run in only drop points to Liverpool and Manchester City, have we bottled it? If that scenario happens, it will be a run of 16 games, 14 wins, 1 draw and 1 defeat. The draw happening at Anfield and the defeat away to Manchester City.

I am not sure how a team can be labelled as bottling the league due to failing to win at Liverpool or Manchester City – two of the best teams in Europe of the last decade.

It also seems to have been forgotten that we are still 6 points clear. The title is in our hands. The equation has not changed – win every game and we are champions.

So those outlets saying that Sunday was the end of our title challenge? I am not sure how they have worked that out.

With West Ham and Southampton up next, we are gauranteed being above City when we face them at the Etihad. That is 6 games to go.

I am sure that at the beginning of the season, we all would have taken being top of the league going into that City fixture.

The fact we are disappointed with just a point at Liverpool shows how far we have come this season.

We have taken 4 points from 6 this season against Liverpool. In our last 12 league games against them, we had only taken 5 points!

Anfield is a place we had not won at in the league since 2012. and not done the home and away double since 2009. It was always going to be a tough game.

Liverpool might be 8th, but that is more to do with their form against lesser teams. As mentioned above, they have won 3 out of 4 at home to those sides in the top 4. And they have only lost once at home all season.

If we go and finish 2nd in the league, on goal difference, behind Manchester City. Or even 3 points behind if we do not get the win at Newcastle, then no one can say we bottled the league. It will mean dropped points at Anfield, Etihad and St James Park.

Remember: Newcastle beat Manchester United and drew with Manchester City at home.

It will be the Everton away defeat followed up by the draw at home to Brentford that costs us. But even then, we get 90+ points and finish 2nd, I do not think we can have any complaints.

We are not Tottenham. They have the Spursy tag because of how often they miss it up, and how little they win. We have the 3rd most titles, the most FA Cups. Certainly not the silverware you would associate with a club that “has a history of bottling it” as some media are making out.

So we dust ourselves down and go again next weekend. West Ham away. and that is followed up by Southampton at home.

Win both and we will be at least 9 points clear of Manchester City going into the game against them (although they will then have 2 games in hand).

Stick with it guys. Winning a league title is not easy.

Keenos

MATCH REPORT: Liverpool 2 – 2 Arsenal

Liverpool (1) 2 Arsenal (2) 2

Premier League

Anfield Stadium, Anfield Road, Anfield, Liverpool L4 0TH

Sunday, 9th April 2023. Kick-off time: 4.30pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Ben White, Rob Holding, Gabriel Magalhães, Oleksandr Zinchenko; Martin Ødegaard (c), Thomas Partey, Granit Xhaka; Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Kieran Tierney, Emile Smith-Rowe, Jakob Kiwior, Leandro Trossard, (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Fabio Vieira, Reiss Nelson, Matt Turner, Reuell Walters.

Scorers: Gabriel Martinelli (8 mins), Gabriel Jesus (28 mins)

Yellow Cards: Ben White, Aaron Ramsdale, Granit Xhaka, Bukayo Saka

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 41% 

Referee: Paul Tierney

Assistant Referees: Constantine Hatzidakis, Scott Ledger

Fourth Official: Craig Pawson

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Chris Kavanagh; AVAR Adam Nunnanfield

Attendance: circa 54,000

We are back again at Anfield, the place of one of our most famous victories back in 1989, of course. This time, although it is not a decider as such, it is still a most important date in our fixtures calendar, and a victory today will be a huge boost on our final run-in to claim the Premiership title at the end of May. As is the case with our encounters over the years, no quarter will be given nor taken, and we are under no illusions that it will be an extremely tough ninety minutes here on Merseyside this Easter Sunday afternoon.

We started the match quickly and with a good attitude too, as we took the game to the home side in the opening exchanges here at Anfield. Despite some early pressure from Liverpool, it was us who took the lead after just eighttminutes, when Bukayo Saka hit a ball into space and found Martin Ødegaard, who slipped it through the middle and as it bounced off Virgil van Dijk, it fell into the path of Gabriel Martinelli, who merely poked the ball past the Liver pool goalie. A great start! The goal certainly gave us the confidence that we needed, as we came at them again, looking for another goal; just four minutes later, Oleksandr Zinchenko took a shot that was heading for the far corner of the net, but Alisson pushed it away for a corner. Gabriel Jesus then switched the ball across to Bukayo Saka in a clever movement; he slipped in a cross to the back post and Gabriel Jesus, following his run, sliced the ball over the crossbar from an extremely tight angle indeed. The home side tried to catch us on the break, but as Mo Salah cut in in from the right, he played the ball straight to Rob Holding, who neutralised the danger. Liverpool started to take the game to us, as they had a good chance to equalise from the right foot of Andy Robertson, but thankfully, he whacked it wide of Aaron Ramsdale’s goal. Ben White received the first yellow card of the day, when he tackled Diogo Jota rather clumsily, and a couple of minutes later, Gabriel Jesus grabbed our second goal of the game, when Gabriel Martinelli curled the ball in perfectly for him, beating Andy Robertson to it, heading in our second goal of the game, and before even so much as half an hour of the match has passed! We look confident, and a couple of minutes after the second goal, Virgil van Dijk was easily beaten by Gabriel Jesus and he cynically brought him down, earning himself a justified yellow card. The home side then got a little close to scoring when a Mo Salah effort went wide of Aaron Ramsdale’s goal, and then Gabriel Jesus went down from a challenge from Diogo Jota near the corner and we were awarded a free-kick, which went nowhere. Cleverly, Ben White correctly read a weak pass from Andy Robertson to earn possession back for Arsenal in Liverpool’s half, and we came forward again, hunting for a precious third goal before half time. However, it was the home side that got a goal through Mo Salah from close range. This gave the home side confidence, and as the match edged towards half time, it was Liverpool who looked on the ascendancy now. During injury time, the home side got a free-kick when Mo Salah was fouled, but thankfully, Jordan Henderson fired it over the bar, so we went into the break leading Liverpool by two goals to one.

We tried to catch them cold at the beginning of the second half, with a superb shot by Oleksandr Zinchenko, in which his left footed shot from outside the penalty area was blocked, and then the home side applied a lot of pressure on us in order to try to score. Less than ten minutes after the restart, Rob Holding brought down Diogo Jota in our penalty area and thus a penalty was awarded to the home side, during which Aaron Ramsdale was booked. Our hearts were in our mouths, but fortunately Mo Salah took a poor penalty and missed the target completely. However, this miss merely served to fire up Liverpool more and they continued to pressurise us in order to search for an equaliser. There was a delay when Gabriel was attended to by our medical staff over an injury, and when play was resumed, both sides tried exceptionlly hard to break each other’s defences down, but nobody was budging at all. With sixteen minutes of the match remaining. Bukayo Saka slotted the ball to Martin Ødegaard, whose left-footed shot from outside the penalty area was saved by Alisson as the ball was heading for the bottom left corner of the net. Mikel Arteta made a double subsitution with ten minutes of the game remaining with Leandro Trossard and Jakub Kiwior replacing Gabriel Jesus and Martin Ødegaard (who passed the captain’s armband to Granit Xhaka). The home side sensed that the match was in its final stages, and during this short period of immense pressure, Bukayo Saka received a yellow card for a clumsy foul. In the eighty-fifth minute, Bukayo Saka put an excellent cross into the Liverpool penalty area, and Gabriel Magalhães met it; it was a superb header from the centre of the penalty area, which was saved in the centre of the goal by Alisson. However, just two minutes later, Liverpool grabbed an equaliser when Roberto Firmino’s header finally beat Aaron Ramsdale from close range. Almost immediately, Kieran Tierney replaced Oleksandr Zinchenko, and a little time later, Gabriel Martinelli passed the ball to Kieran Tierney, whose left-footed shot flashed by Alisson’s right-hand post. So close. Although both sides had their chances to grab a late winner, the score remained the same with honours even.

Overall, we did enough to come away with the full three points, particularly after the first half performance, in which the home side were completely outplayed. In the second half, Aaron Ramsdale was truly magnificent between the sticks, keeping out shot after shot, frustrating the Liverpool strikers throughout. Even in injury time, when he surely kept the best for last with a flying fingertip save from Salah’s deflected curling effort, before somehow keeping out Ibrahima Konate’s attempt to bundle home the winner from practically on the goal-line with only seconds of the match remaining. This draw at Anfield this afternoon leaves us six points ahead of Manchester City, who have a game in hand over us at this stage of the season. We surely cannot afford any more slip ups, and although we came away with a point today, it truly could have been a lot worse. Keep going, chaps.

Remember everyone, keep the faith, get behind the team and the manager, as this season is going to be crucial for our future success in all competitions. Stick with the winners. Our next match: West Ham United at the London Stadium on Sunday, 16th April at 2.00pm(Premier League). Be there, if you can. Victoria Concordia Crescit.

Steve

Too Dearly Loved To Be Forgotten: Arsenal v Racing Club de Paris 1930-1962 by Steve Ingless (Rangemore Publications, ISBN 978-1-5272-0135-4) is now available on Amazon