Kolek planning to go pro
Thank people like GooooMarquette for screwing it up. At least we know there will be two empty seats in Row A for most games. I had to take 441 B 11/12. I've had the seats for years but it was nicer when we had center of the section.
Wow, I'm very concerned for Benny. Being able to mimic Myron Medcalf's writing so closely implies an oncoming case of dementia.
I will say this Benny. I think chick and I benefit from the fact that we only purchase 2 tickets.
I suppose I'm fortunate that the only check I'm writing to Marquette annually on behalf of my kids is for their full-price MBB season ticket. I probably should see the benefit in that.
I noticed a lot more people doing "skip dibs" on the non-license seats this year (i.e. those seats where you can actually choose the specific seats), in other words, I'm seeing more incidents where several non-contiguous single seats in a row are available one hour and gone the next... seats that no one would in their right mind would pick unless they either a) were buying just one seat or b) actually knew who was in the seats around them.No... Benny has not done this. I just email my cousin my seats after selecting, and he picks his a few hours later. Some years we're next to each other, other years (like this one), I'm in seats 1-4, he's a couple seats over in the row behind us... since we're in the upstairs slums (read: lots of no-shows), we usually end up sitting next to each other any way. But I'm noticing it becoming more common at re-seating, especially in Sections 441, 403 and 410-412.How I think it works is like this: you have your appt. at X time. Your buddy has his appt. materially later than you (one hour to several days). You guys want to get your seats together, but you want to take advantage of the selection at the earlier appt., so the one with the earlier appt. selects seats leaving a "gap" that anyone except your buddy would find undesirable.Examples: A) You want six seats together. At your selection time you select four seats: 2-3-5-6, and your buddy selects seats 1 and 4 at his.B) You want five seats together (3 for you, 2 for him) in a row with only six seats (1-6) left. You pick 2-4-5, he picks 1 and 3.C) More common, but more risky: You want four seats together on the aisle. You pick seats 3-4, he picks 1-2. (since this only deters people looking for more than 2 seats, probably used only when appt. times are close together).And so forth. Of course, you risk someone who only wants a single seat picking one of the "dib seats" (or maybe just a troublemaker... no one here, of course) and screwing it up for both of you.That said, I don't have a problem with it because a) there is some risk involved and b) if you want a better selection at your appt. time, up your points. Anyone else noticing this, or am I just too cynical?