BillyLP wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 10:16 am
Flipper wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:07 am
Schadenfreude wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 4:11 pm
Flipper wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 3:18 pm
I'm way too lazy to research it...but I would be willing to bet attendance is higher for later season games that start Saturday afternoons than midweek.
I'm certain this is true. I just don't think the difference is as big as some people assume. We can't compare November weeknight games to September Saturday afternoons. A better comparison is November weeknight games to November weekend games. I remember a lot of thin November crowds back in the day when all games were on Saturdays, contests could still end in a tie and MAC games essentially never got on television.
I remember a more engaged fan base...particularly amongst the students..when we didn't put a bigger emphasis on pleasing ESPN than our core audience
I think there is certainly a contribution by inconvenient game times, but there is also just less general interest in attending games now than there used to be. A MAC school isn't going to blow it out of the water with student attendance, regardless of schedule, unless there is sustained success over a 3-4 year period. Like, Boise State success, not Central Michigan from 06-09 success. That's almost impossible for us to obtain because we don't have the money to keep people around for that long unless a massive donor comes along and decides to bankroll football or give a massive endowment.
This is definitely part of the issue.
College football attendance is down all over the place. The massive exodus of HS players is leading to lower quality of play across the board, even while the number of FBS teams has gone up.
It's not that people don't still care about college football, but they don't watch every minute of their home team anymore. On any given week there might be 3-4 good games on TV, if I am going to watch college football I'm going to be somewhere that I can easily jump over to one of the good games. The quality of play in the MAC is so bad that it is real tough to watch even when the games are competitive. The Akron/BG game was competitive, but my god was that some awful football.
I'm on record, I think weeknight MACtion is terrible for our conference. It is directly responsible for me jettisoning my season tickets, and that quickly came to me not even bothering to go on Saturday games anymore. On the plus side it made me realize how much happier I am enjoying Fall Saturdays and only worrying about football if I have a free day, but that is NOT good for BGSU if it comes to keeping people engaged. That said, it's also folly to think going back to playing Saturday games all year will bring back the fan engagement that we used to have.
This is a new world. College football largely sucks, and the MAC is about as bad as it can possibly be and still be considered FBS football. The finances have made it impossible for me to believe the MAC ever sniffs anything close to what it was 20 years ago. Fan engagement is at an all time low, and I don't see how it improves. I have hated MACtion for as long as it became an every game thing, but at this point I don't know that it even matters anymore. Maybe this was the inevitable end game to a decade or more of not caring about fans, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy at this point. As a fan who readily admits I'm almost never going to dedicate 4 hours of my life to BG football anymore the nice thing about MACtion is I can check in on the game here and there more easily on a Thursday night than I will on a Saturday afternoon.