Some of you may remember we did a summer marketing campaign back in 89 after the national championship season. We did a series of newspaper ads, a guy cutting grass in his Furman football helmet, a woman laying out in the sun with a Furman football helmet - it got a lot of attention. Today you'd run facebook ads, etc…
That's like a radical idea these days it seems; but It makes sense to me.
ESPN online games could be an advertisement for people to come out to the game; but it fails because
they don't show enough of the fans enjoying themselves.
It's about people. People attract people.
The broadcast can't just be about the game; it's got to be about how fun it is to be at the game.
Turn the main camera toward the home crowd instead of the empty visitor section.
Show the cheerleaders and band more and with some audio.
The sound of the crowd is more entertaining then some of those commentators so turn their mics down a bit
and let some background noise in. Sell the atmosphere of the game.
Show people the fun they are missing when they don't go to the game.
You sure nailed that one, man. For the real football fan, going to a game is the best experience and for one simple reason - it is fun. I had some friends down for the VMI game this year and they raved about the entire experience - from the tailgating to the post game "grazing" party. I think that everything about the Furman home game atmosphere is great and find it baffling that more pure football fans don't find it a great way to spend a Saturday in the fall.
If we disagree, it is not huge and can be overcome. If teams like the ones on your list and mine will not help “the problem” (our schedule being the problem, per the previous writer), then there is probably no solution. The solution is not to just stick only with the convenient Big South teams, in my opinion. I do think that the schools like I listed, even when we have to play only 5 homes games per year, will add interest more than just staying with the Gardner-Webb, Campbell, Charleston Southern type schools, and definitely much more than scheduling teams like Point, Newberry, Mars Hill, Catawba, Benedict, Allen, Limestone, Erskine, and so forth.
I rather travel to Benedict than to PC if that became a choice though.
Better stadium, atmosphere and bigger crowd.
Home games average over 4k .
They would be the underdog so how that would impact turnout is a guess.
I graduated from Furman in 1983 summer graduation as a 2nd Lieutenant in the army with a degree in Computer Science/Mathematics. I keep saying this because a former teammate turned lawyer lied for 35-40 years that I didn't graduate.
If we disagree, it is not huge and can be overcome. If teams like the ones on your list and mine will not help “the problem” (our schedule being the problem, per the previous writer), then there is probably no solution. The solution is not to just stick only with the convenient Big South teams, in my opinion. I do think that the schools like I listed, even when we have to play only 5 homes games per year, will add interest more than just staying with the Gardner-Webb, Campbell, Charleston Southern type schools, and definitely much more than scheduling teams like Point, Newberry, Mars Hill, Catawba, Benedict, Allen, Limestone, Erskine, and so forth.
I rather travel to Benedict than to PC if that became a choice though.
Better stadium, atmosphere and bigger crowd.
Home games average over 4k .
They would be the underdog so how that would impact turnout is a guess.
I graduated from Furman in 1983 summer graduation as a 2nd Lieutenant in the army with a degree in Computer Science/Mathematics. I keep saying this because a former teammate turned lawyer lied for 35-40 years that I didn't graduate.
While we're talking about the schedule, I would like to know why we play early season home games at 1 P.M. when its 95 degrees under a blazing sun.
Wouldn't a 7 P.M start time for games in Sept. make better sense?
This is me, but I love the fact that we start home games at 1:00.
It's a hot time of year. If they moved the start time back, then folks are just baking while tailgating (which, to me, is always worse) instead of baking while in the stadium.
I hate the 1 pm start in the blazing heat. At the tailgate, you can at least get in the shade.
I like 7:00 p.m. early in the year. 2 p.m. mid year and night again late in the year.
"Now remember, when things look bad and it looks like you're not gonna make it, then you gotta get mean. I mean plumb, mad-dog mean.
'Cause if you lose your head and you give up then you neither live nor win. That's just the way it is.”
I like 12:00 noon, 12:30, or 1:00 at latest.
People from <4 hours away can get there & back home same day, no problem. It’s often hot even in mid-October. During Daylight Savings Time, which is until about game nine, 5 to 5:30 PM is often the hottest temperatures all day. Get the game over by 4:30 PM at latest.