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Schelling: Students’ voices hopefully change policy for better

Jordan Schelling
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Mark your calendars now: Student football tickets go on sale June 22 at 8:30 a.m.

Set five alarms or stay up all night with a case of 5-Hour Energy if you have to, because tickets will once again be first-come, first-served — just like the good ol’ days.

Now before you criticize the Athletic Department based on the rapid sellout and communication issues in the past, keep in mind why it made the change.

According to the press release, the decision to change (or go back to normal) was made “after considering substantial feedback from students.”

I guess all the complaining everyone did about the lottery system worked after all.

So, this means you don’t have to win a lottery to get the opportunity to buy tickets this season, and you won’t have to wear wristbands like the start of last season after the success of the “Fuck the wristbands” chant. So, that’s the good news, but what about the bad news?

Well, with the introduction of a complete first-come, first-served system, the Athletic Department has put everyone on equal ground. That’s right — whether you’re on your victory lap as a fifth-year senior or an incoming freshman, you have an equal opportunity to buy season tickets to watch Bret Bielema’s new punt formation.

That means your friend’s roommate’s little brother, who may not have even set foot on campus before now, has just as much chance of buying tickets as you or I.

So while you’re toiling away at your summer job or internship with another “case of the Mondays” on June 22, be careful not to let some bright-eyed and bushy-tailed incoming freshman who has yet to appreciate the beauty of thousands of drunken students singing “Sweet Caroline” swoop in and take away your tickets.

Sure, they’ve always reserved some tickets for freshmen, but in doing so, they kept the playing field level among returning students by making them compete only with each other while incoming freshmen had to win a lottery to get tickets. This meant there were more tickets available to sophomores, juniors and seniors, and they were all but guaranteed to anyone who remembered the date and time of the sale.

If you’re a graduate student, however, you’re in luck.

Rather than hope to beat out the countless number of students trying to buy tickets at 8:33 a.m. on June 22, you can conveniently stroll over to www.uwbadgers.com on July 6 and buy one of 1,700 tickets reserved for graduate and professional students.

Wait, what?

That’s right, apparently graduate students are more coveted attendees of Wisconsin football games than undergraduates. And it’s not like they will have a lottery for graduate students to buy tickets — they can buy one of those 1,700 in the same first-come, first-served fashion as everyone else.

Of course, if the graduate students decide 1,700 tickets is too many for them as a collective unit to purchase in four days, they will become available to the general student body on July 13.

Why the three-day gap between the end of graduate sales and the reopening of the tickets to undergrads? Sometimes I think the people that think these systems up just pick random, arbitrary dates for everything and hope everything works out for the best.

Although the new-old ticketing system employed by the Athletic Department for the upcoming season is a step in the right direction, it leaves plenty of room for improvement. And although I will not need tickets to the football games in the fall — barring any unforeseen change in my job description — I offer a few suggestions.

First, reserve a specific (read: small) number of tickets for freshman.

The number should be somewhere in the same range of the freshman lottery in the past and those tickets, like all the rest, should be first-come, first-serve among new students.

In doing so, the UW would give at least a small amount of priority to students who have actually sat through a power lecture before, rather than group them in with all incoming freshmen who held their high school graduation party the night before buying tickets.

Second, student IDs should be scanned at every game to determine who is using their tickets and who is simply selling them off to someone else.

It seems inevitable tickets will sell out at a record pace with the new system, so to make things fair, those that scalp tickets for obscene amounts of money should be punished in future seasons.

It’s simple: Track everyone who buys tickets and check to see if they actually use their tickets or if they sell to someone else. If someone buys tickets and fails to attend a single game, do one of two things next year: Either prevent them from buying tickets altogether or make them wait a day or two to purchase tickets.

Finally, make sure everyone with any potential interest in purchasing tickets receives the e-mail announcement this year. I don’t care if you flood my e-mail inbox with a reminder every day from now until June 22 — if that’s what it takes to ensure that people don’t “forget” about the purchase date, so be it.

As long as everyone has an equal chance to watch John Clay and company crush the likes of Wofford, Northern Illinois and Fresno State, I’m confident this system will be better than the lottery I had to wait out last June.

Jordan is a junior majoring in journalism and political science. Think the new system will work? Have any creative plans for making sure you wake up in time? Let him know at jschelling@badgerherald.com.


5 Comments | Leave a comment

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Jordan,

I fail to see the reason behind your hatred of graduate students. There are about 13,000 of us on campus and quite a few of us are rabid Badger football fans. (Then again, a significant minority couldn’t pick a real football out of a police lineup.) If you don’t think that freshmen deserve equal access to tickets, why should I think that measly juniors that have never heard of preliminary exams deserve the same access to tickets as me?

Additionally, who says that 8:30 AM is early? The sun rises at about 5:20 in the morning during late June. If you’re sleeping three hours after sunrise, get a job and see how long that attitude keeps you in a job outside of Kentucky Grilled Chicken. The hope with the 8:30 time (I’m guessing) is that people doing internships in the Midwest start work at 9 and can get tickets before that time. East Coast kids, you’re screwed.

Finally, how many tickets are reserved for undergraduates?

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West Coast kids are screwed. Learn how time zones work. 8:30 a.m. Central is 6:30 a.m. out west. and 9:30 a.m. out east

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Did you even try to write a worthwhile article? If you did, try harder next time. This article is sloppy.

First, why are you saying graduate students are “more coveted attendees” of football games than undergrads? Graduate students are allotted 1,700 leaving 12,300 for undergraduates. How is a class receiving 10,600 less tickets more coveted?

If you made that statement insinuating they are more coveted because they get their own time to purchase, first, you need to be more clear, second, graduate students and professional students often find out about their admittance to the university much later than freshman. This was made clear on the student season ticket website. Do your research next time pal.

While I agree some form of seniority should probably be put in place, your reasoning is weak sauce. Freshmen should get less tickets because they have never sat through a power lecture. Please. Freshmen are some of the most rabid fans in the student section, attending every game and generally arriving on time, because the experience is new to them. Wouldn’t you be pissed if when you were a freshman you didn’t get tickets because you never sat through a power lecture?

I could keep going but I’ll just conclude by saying I got far more information about the new ticket system by just reading their website. I could do without your poor attempts at humor. I have heard your suggestions for fixes a billion times before. They are as weak then as they are now.

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Haha Schelling getting pwned by grad students…hilarious…

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12:00pm, how are they screwed? 6:30 AM means that the vast majority of them can sign up before work, whereas those of us that have a full time summer job in central or eastern time zones have to find a computer during work or hope to god that they didn’t sell out before we get home. I would prefer it was 6:30 than 8:30.

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