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VANOC unveils ticket prices for 2010 Olympics

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CTV.ca News Staff

Date: Thu. Oct. 11 2007 9:45 PM ET

Tickets to the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics go on sale in exactly one year, and organizers say they are trying to keep the event affordable.

"When we bid for the 2010 Games, we made a promise. And that promise was that anyone who wanted to go to the games would be able to go, that no one would be left out, that we would make it possible," John Furlong, CEO of VANOC, said at a news conference Thursday in Vancouver.

"Today, we are delivering on that promise. We are delivering a ticket program that is accessible and affordable."

There will be 50,000 free tickets and half the tickets will be $100 or less, he said.

About 100,000 tickets will be available for $25 or less.

"It would be easy to think it's just another ticket to another sports event, but it's not," Furlong said. "It's the entire Olympic experience, an experience that will not come our way again for many, many, many years."

For a premium event like the opening and closing ceremonies, prices will range from $175 to $1,100, said Dave Cobb, VANOC's executive vice-president of revenue, marketing and communications.

The must-see events for Canadians are the gold medal games in men's and women's hockey. The prices reflect that. Tickets for the men's event will start at $350 and peak at $775.

Part of the pricing strategy could be tied to revenue goals. VANOC has budgeted on $232 million in ticket revenue, but that is based on 90 per cent of the tickets being sold.

In addition, Furlong noted that having fans in the stands also makes for a much better experience for the athletes.

Scalpers

The Vancouver Olympic Committee is concerned that some of the tickets will be snatched up by scalpers, who could then pawn them off to customers at inflated prices.

So, it's carefully tracking the unauthorized sale of event tickets. One business that recently began advertising tickets for the opening and closing ceremonies has already been forced to shut down. It was selling tickets for as much as $2,400. It wasn't just the high prices that raised eyebrows. There was another problem: VANOC hasn't yet released a single ticket for sale.

VANOC wants to cut down on scalping by creating a process that will allow only one application per person. They'll also analyze credit card and address information so that one person or group doesn't monopolize seats.

VANOC's Caley Denton told CTV News in Vancouver that they "will try to work and shut down people who are trying to sell their tickets for a profit."

He said the practice of outside vendors selling tickets at inflated prices "isn't within the spirit of our program and is actually against the rules of purchasing a ticket."

One more way VANOC hopes tickets go to Olympic fans and not scalpers is through a lottery system for events most in demand.

Availability

About 1.6 million tickets are available. About 30 per cent of all tickets are reserved for members of the "Olympic family."

For the Canadian public, people must apply starting in October 2008.

Tickets will be distributed by lottery, so there's no guarantee of getting the events one seeks.

In the second phase in early 2009, unsold tickets will be made available.

Seat assignment will take place from mid-2009 and lasting until year's end. This is the last phase because venue configurations will be finalized in this period.

The 2010 Winter Games taken place in Vancouver and Whistler from Feb. 12 to 28, 2010, while the Paralympic Games will run from March 12, to 21, 2010.

Cobb warned people against buying from unofficial vendors or outright scalpers.

"We're going to spend a lot of time educating potential purchasers of tickets about the dangers of buying from anyone other than an authorized agent of ours," he said.

"The last thing we would want to see happen is if someone buys an invalid ticket -- a counterfeit ticket, a ticket that has had its barcode cancelled because it's been stolen  -- and those people arrive at a venue at Vancouver/Whistler 2010 and they don't get in."

Inevitably there will be counterfeit tickets out there, and "if people want assurances that they're going to go to a venue and have their ticket accepted, they need to buy it from us," Cobb said.

With reports from CTV's British Columbia

Please Add Comments( )

DK
said
0 0

Or...
You could watch it all on CTV for FREE!


JKL
said
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It is great to see that BC is holding the Olympics and are trying to keep the ticket prices reasonable.The only problem you have now is the accomodations in Vancouver will go ski high.


AB
said
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Maybe the skiing events will have something to do with being ski high, but for the other events the prices will probably be sky high.


Ian M
said
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$375 for the crappiest seat in the house is reasonable for a hockey game! Whatever. Do they look at the average salary in the country before they price this stuff? Just like al sports only the corporations or wealthy can enjoy the live expierience, the real world gets to watch it on TV.


Dalton McGuinty
said
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I think it's a lot of hype for nothing. Nothing special.


LM
said
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Our current Olympic games and atheletes are so far removed from the "Olympic spirit" that one might just as well watch the WWF and it's steriod pumped goons. I hope no taxpayers money is spent on this.


CF
said
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I am not sure this is all that affordable for a familly of 4! We already lost our rinks for them.. what kind of legacy are we really getting... I am going to rent my townhouse and go on the beach.. anyone's interested??


JV
said
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Accomodations are always the expensive part of the Olympics. In Athens sleeping on the beach at the end of the tram line was the only possibility. Turin, forget it... was cheapest to stay in France and commute by train. Vancouver will be hopeless for the non-rich since no beaches to crash on in the winter, and no realistic places to commute to/from.


ken
said
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Olympics are a big waste of money. Look at the mayhem it caused businesses and roadwork. That money should go to healthcare and schooling instead. Think about it: how much we spend on training athletes. Who actually gets to become the athlete? If your parents have money you have the luxury of being good at the sport.it caters to the rich.all this for a couple weeks of fun for the rich at taxpayers expense. What a joke... I can sell you some land on the moon...


Cory
said
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The prices seem fair, however, more pressing is the need for improvements to the transit system in order to move the vast number of people that will be traveling between Vancouver and Whistler and it does not seem that the B.C. government nor the Canadian Olympic organizers are placing enough emphasis in this area.


Roch
said
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It's affordable so long as your favourite spectator sport is luge-watching or cross country skiing.

But this is Canada, hockey is what matters, and the prices are atrocious.


Brian
said
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So let me get this straight......I can pay over $700 to see a hockey game, but I am not guaranteed I will get the game I want and I don't even know where I will sit. As the 1st comment states, I can pay nothing, see replays and know what seat I will be in if I stay home. I want to know what events and where I would be standing for $25.


SD
said
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Are you kidding me.. 1300 or more for the opening? That's real reasonable. Especially with that racist Bruce Allen on the commmitte! And who cares what this does to the homeless and poor. And don't even get me started on the inukshuk how the hell does that represent Vancouver?


Rob
said
0 0

And the Organizing Committee thinks these prices are affordable?


Mountain Man
said
0 0

Taxpayers in BC and the rest of Canada have already paid for these games and are still paying more everyday.
The rich have a great time and we the peeons watch at home. We will be paying for this long after it's done and gone.



Matt
said
0 0

They better gouge like crazy.
They took millions of our tax dollars for a sporting event that many people don't care about.

They should charge the maximum they can get so they can return those subsidies back to the people of Canada.


Scarlett
said
0 0

If this is too pricey for all of you..., stay home. I for one am not a millionaire but this is still affordable to the average Canadian. It's a once in a lifetime event to have an Olympics in your home country. You also have over 2 years to save. Or if you were smart, you started saving back in 2003 when the games were awarded, like I did! I will be proud to pay $700 to cheer the men's hockey team to victory.

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