The reality of attendances at Arsenal can be revealed today, after the club conceded 120,000 seats were left unoccupied during last season.
Official figures released by the Gunners have recently been based on the number of tickets sold, rather than the number of supporters physically entering through the turnstiles on matchdays.
Consequently, attendances announced during matches have often caused consternation, given the total is almost always very close to the stadium’s capacity of 60,338 despite readily identifiable empty seats.
The club confirmed an average attendance of 59,786 last season but the figure according to the Metropolitan Police was 53,788 — nearly 6,000 lower, totalling 173,945 more empty seats at Emirates Stadium over the course of the year than officially claimed.
This information was obtained by an Arsenal supporter and blogger named ‘John B’, who applied for the accurate figures under the Freedom of Information Act. The Met Police responded to his request with a full spreadsheet claiming that, on average, 6,550 seats were left empty during each of Arsenal’s 29 home games last season.
However, Arsenal categorically state the Met Police figures are inaccurate. They insist those numbers include only supporters going through the turnstiles and not those entering through the stadium car parks into VIP areas, executive boxes and other hospitality areas.
They conduct their own internal attendance counts and believe the total figure is closer to 120,000, which equates to more than 4,000 unused seats at every game or two matches per season played in an empty stadium.
A club spokesman told Standard Sport: “The vast majority of matches are sold out but, of course, we want to see the stadium full for every match. We are working hard to make sure people who buy tickets actually attend the matches and are developing a number of systems to help fans unable to attend matches sell their tickets in advance.”
Not in dispute, however, is the existence of a disparity between tickets sold and actual attendances. This is, of course, not a problem exclusive to Arsenal with many clubs increasing the levels of corporate hospitality and executive areas which generates revenue but does not guarantee the same loyalty as a regular supporter.
Arsenal are one such club believed to have thousands of season ticket holders who attend only a handful of times a season.
To combat the problem, they have introduced a Ticket Exchange service where unwanted tickets can be resold. The club believe 40,500 tickets were reassigned through this method last season but one ongoing criticism of the system is that sellers cannot set the price of their tickets and instead must be resold at face value.
The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust believe it may be necessary for the club to revoke season tickets from members who only sporadically attend games.
“The AST have been raising this issue with Arsenal for a long time and progress is now being made,” an AST spokesman told Standard Sport. “We have urged them to make real investment into improving their ticket exchange arrangements and to incentivise the use of tickets by allocating Cup Final tickets to those who go to most games and they say this is something they’d like to do when technology allows.
“It may even be time to consider removing season tickets from those who rarely attend
However, Arsenal categorically state the Met Police figures are inaccurate. They insist those numbers include only supporters going through the turnstiles and not those entering through the stadium car parks into VIP areas, executive boxes and other hospitality areas.
it doesn't work like that, they don't count people out, they clear zones
I know they won't count everyone out but up to date numbers would still be useful to the police in terms of crowd control, staffing, etc etc.
In a worst case scenario if there was a bomb or a partial stadium collapse and nobody knew for certain if they were going in to find 10 people buried in the rubble or 200..
my point is it's actually really irresponsible to not provide the police with exact number of people in the stadium on a match day and it should be part of their events/stadium licence/conditions to provide the police with such numbers.
I know they won't count everyone out but up to date numbers would still be useful to the police in terms of crowd control, staffing, etc etc.
In a worst case scenario if there was a bomb or a partial stadium collapse and nobody knew for certain if they were going in to find 10 people buried in the rubble or 200..
my point is it's actually really irresponsible to not provide the police with exact number of people in the stadium on a match day and it should be part of their events/stadium licence/conditions to provide the police with such numbers.
Winning the FA cup may have seen the woolwich breathe a big sigh of relief but I think its going to cost them, it kept wenger in a job and while he's kept them in the CL every year, there's no progression under him, he played Ozil out of position a lot last year, the german sulked and was anonymous in a few games, fabregas very quickly decided not to rejoin his supposed "mentor", you dont see that many 65 year olds in coaching jobs anymore unless their trophy haul is recent and very impressive, how many years since they won the league now ?
He didn't play Ozil out of position. He's just not that good.
I know we got one today but **** ME do these pricks get a lot of late goals.
In spite of all the ****erry over Sanchez and Errrrrrrzil, Ramsey is clearly their best player and probably top 2 or 3 in the league. Just wish Real Madrid could recognise that and get him out if there ASAP.
I think that Ramsey is leagues ahead of Wheelchair. With everyone fit, I don't think that Wheelchair starts for them, Ramsey would be one of the first names on the team sheet.I can't agree. He's ok but not out of this world IMO just like Wheelchair.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.