Declining Student Attendance At College Football Games Sweeps The Nation

Football is one of the defining aspects of the college experience. It’s also one of the things I miss the most about school. It feels weird not waking up on a Saturday morning, getting hammered, and watching my team play. It sucks not being able to go to games. I always assumed everyone else felt the same way about college football. I was mistaken.

A decline in student attendance is a trend that’s been sweeping the nation for a few years now. School administrations, and in particular, their athletic departments, are worried. Even in the SEC, where football is essentially revered as a religion, students aren’t going to games like they used to. This means that, of course, ticket sales are down, and that funds aren’t being raised for athletics as easily as they once were.

Take the University of Georgia as an example. Sanford Stadium is one of the best venues for college football in the country. Georgia fans are renowned for their fierce support of their team. However, over the past four years, 39% of student seating at Sanford has been empty. What the hell is going on?

Even Alabama, with three recent national championships, is facing the same problem. 32% of their student section went unfilled. So, if winning games isn’t the problem, then what is?

My personal theory is that people are just throwing better tailgates than ever before. I’ve personally witnessed this trend over the past several years, and it’s definitely got some merit. Fans are going all out. It’s not just showing up early, having some beers, and grilling burgers anymore. Tailgating is an all day affair. For some, it may even be the main event of the day.

Last year, when I went to the Georgia-South Carolina game in Columbia, I witnessed this firsthand. I was unable to get a ticket, and the friend I was staying with couldn’t get me one either. They were ridiculously expensive, and at that point, I was more focused on getting drunk. My friend told me I’d still be able to have a good time, even though I couldn’t make it into the game. His fraternity, along with several others, were set up in what was called “The Frat Lot.” The tailgates here didn’t stop just because the game was starting.

Aside from an endless supply of booze, their were bands, food, and a bunch of very attractive young ladies. Honestly, at that point, I wasn’t even pissed I couldn’t get a ticket. The game was being shown on a projector inside a tent. There were kegs, a liquor luge, and pledges to refill my cup. It was a pretty good gig, to say the least.

Some people who are much smarter than I am and analyze this kind of shit for a living have some similar theories. Some believe that students aren’t going to games because of poor cell reception at the games. Admittedly, that is always a huge pain in the ass, but would you really let it keep you from seeing your team play?

Others think that non-conference schedules are keeping students from coming out to games. I can see some truth to this. While it’s great to see your team win, do you really care about seeing them stomp some no-name team from a no-name conference? The big ticket games between rivals or ranked teams are always going to be big sellers, but the out-of-conference beat downs will not.

Still, there are other factors at hand. Some believe that the ease and convenience of watching the game in high def from a bar or the living room is beating out viewing it live at the stadium. I love the bar as much as the next guy, but come on, can it really beat the game day experience of the student section?

The SEC has even hired a market research firm, Now What, to look into this problem. It’s clearly a big deal.

“We can’t afford to lose a generation,” said Mississippi State athletic director Scott Stricklin, a member of the SEC’s committee on the game-day experience.

Shit. Losing a generation? Come on, guys. Aren’t we better than this?

So, what exactly is being done? Athletic departments have identified that there is a problem. Surely, they must have some kind of solution in the works. There are, in fact, a couple out there on the table.

Numerous schools are considering putting Wi-Fi networks in their stadiums as a means of combating the problem created by poor cell service. According to experts, depending on the stadium, these new networks would cost between $2 million and $10 million. However, some schools are looking at more simple approaches.

Oregon will give free food to students who stay for the entire game, provided the Ducks score 40 points or more. Seriously? We need to be enticed by free food to watch a football game? Fuck, I need a drink.

I sincerely hope this problem gets solved. College football is a huge part of the undergraduate experience, and really, when you think about it, our culture as Americans. Have you ever seen the people who never went to college, but are still diehard fans? Why can’t we all have their enthusiasm about our teams? Sure, it’d help if more stadiums sold beer, but honestly, that’s just a minor setback. You can get drunk at the tailgate or bring booze in with you clandestinely. You only get one shot in your life to be a college student. Make it count. Go to every game, cheer on your team, and bash the opponents. Shit, guys. It’s not soccer.

[via The Wall Street Journal]

***

  1. LadieslovetheDeke

    Well when you constantly schedule patty-cake games, you can’t expect your fans to show up. Pick tough teams to play and the fans will come watch.

    11 years ago at 1:00 pm
  2. AlliDeltaPi

    I don’t want to hear that the student section is empty. Anyone who has been to a game knows that 3 strangers’ elbows in your face is typical. That being said– I wouldn’t doubt that that is part of UGA’s problem. All tickets were given to undergrads and then graduate students complained until they got tickets as well. 100% given then became 125%.
    I know people who have had to leave games because the student section is “at capacity”. If pledges save us seats in the upper student section then we get our wristbands and do what we want, but getting into the lower seats is a joke. It’s poor planning by the university. Trying to appease everyone in the end appeases no one.

    11 years ago at 1:04 pm
  3. Fraternity Lifestyle

    TV is the biggest reason. Why get a meh view in the stadium when you could have the best possible view of the action in the comfort of your own home, with cheaper pizza, alcohol, and the potential for a mid-game BJ?

    11 years ago at 3:19 pm
  4. ChapterAdvisor

    My school has more of an issue filling the alumni section than the student section. Between the $500 a night hotel room with a mandatory 2 nights, $40 to park, and $80 for tickets, it’s absolutely ridiculous to watch them blow out some Mac team

    11 years ago at 3:39 pm
  5. ugagreek

    first of all, that picture ISN’T EVEN THE STUDENT SECTION. notice that almost everyone in the picture is over the age of like 30 and are wearing tshirts? we’re an SEC school. we dress up for games. also it was a shit team. no one cares to watch north texas play. hardly anyone left the USC game early and it will be the same tomorrow for the LSU game. i think its funny they say students never show up to the games and in the WSJ article said that in the past 4 years, over 3,000 student seats havent been filled for every single game, when last year i went to 2 different games and got there before kickoff where i couldn’t get a wristband to sit in the student section (i went to all 3 student sections) because they were at full capacity. so that’s funny. it’s sad that the person who wrote this didnt even look at the picture he posted on it to notice that its not students sitting there. our student sections aren’t mixed. they’re ALL students in them. not rando ticket holders.

    11 years ago at 6:10 pm
  6. Dwight D Fratenhower

    This is sort of a cop-out answer, but I would imagine that is a combination of all these things (except cell reception, I just don’t buy it at all). Blowout games will definitely drag attendance down, and i would love to see a break down of attendance numbers between conference games, ranked non-conference, unranked non-conference and 1AA games. Im sure the last two really pull the total numbers down. I also imagine rising ticket prices are a huge factor. All of us on this site like to brag that we are loaded, but lets face it, most college kids are broke. Tons of schools force you to buy a block of tickets for several games, or the entire season. How many college kids have a few extra Gs lying around to drop at the beginning of the semester?

    11 years ago at 7:23 pm
  7. BillNyeTheFratGuy

    THEY GOT RID OF OUR GREEK SECTION SEATING AT ALABAMA!!!!!!! FUCK YOU!!!!

    11 years ago at 8:18 pm
  8. grandfrat

    Seriously, no joke, a lot has to do with the number of foreign kids attending our schools these days. Which I always found entertaining when having a discussion with Rasheeh Patel, or Kim Jung Young about how easy American schools are, and how easy our elementary-highschools are compared to where they came from. Well how is it then, our Universities completely dominate, the WORLD. You don’t see a bunch of ‘Merican kids from Mississippi busting down the doors to go to the University of Bangladesh. Sorry for the rant..

    11 years ago at 9:49 pm
  9. Bro Weekley

    I’m always down to go tailgate and I love SEC football as much as the next person, but I’m not dropping $300 to see a school I don’t even go to play when I can watch it at a bar next to the stadium and get a great experience.

    11 years ago at 11:57 pm