Stric
New member
Not so sure about that. Personally, I'd welcome the idea of extra seats with open arms. Nowadays it's nearly impossible to find a ticket for a high-profile-game (eg Clasico, CL-SF, etc.) at a decent price, because the demand is way higher than the supply. In case of extra seats, that would be evened out more nicely (I hope )
Also, if I remember correctly, if you want to apply for a season-ticket, there's currently a waiting-list of 20 years (or something like that). That's immense, and it could be greatly improved by adding additional seats.
It's true that the average attendance can be rather low at times, but that's because season-ticket holders don't free up their seats (when they don't plan to attend a particular game), and thus the non-season-ticket holders don't have a chance to buy a ticket for that particular game.
Adding 10% to the capacity would change nothing. People would be aware of it, more people would be interested and the demand would still be exactly as much higher than the supply as it is now, if not even higher. These things just work that way. If a phone company provides 1 GB of network traffic a month, the users will usually use some or most of it, sometimes some of them will reach the max, sometimes some of them will cross the limit. If it gets raised to 1.1 GB, they'll just quickly get used to having that extra 100 MB and do the same. The ones who do regularly reach the max will continue to do so. In that same manner, the games with normal attendance will be the same, and the popular games will still get sold-out as quickly as they do now. Not instantly, but as soon as people get used to it.
Besides, there's no point in expanding capacity if the average attendance isn't near maximum. They're making enough profit as it is, so I don't see why we need to invest in 10,000 more seats just for those fewer popular games that reach maximum capacity. Yes, we'd have a few thousand more to fit when there's a Clasico or something like that, but those are rare occasions, most of the time the current capacity is more than enough, and it seems to me it's not profitable. Besides, the Camp Nou is already the largest stadium in Europe. If there's one stadium that doesn't desperately need to raise capacity, it's this one.
If something has to be done, it should be some minor renovation to keep it in shape and maybe work on the outer side. The stadium itself seemed fine to me when I took the tour. In fact, it is by far the best looking stadium I've seen. It was a surpise to hear they have plans to either renovate it or build a new one.
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