GREEN BAY, WI – NOVEMBER 15: Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys players line up at the line of scrimmage prior to the snap of the football during the game between the Dallas Cowboys against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on November 15, 2009 in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Green Bay Packers defeated the Dallas Cowboys 17-7. (Photo by Scott Boehm/Getty Images)[/caption]The Super Bowl ticket resale market slumped minutes after the Dallas Cowboys lost to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday night.
Before Sunday’s playoff game, the cheapest ticket to Super Bowl LI on StubHub was $4,195. Shortly after the Cowboys were defeated 34-31 on a field goal as time ran out, the get-in price was down 20 percent to $3,349. Tickets in the lower end zone dropped 18 percent to $4,307.
“The threat of the Cowboys playing in a Super Bowl within a four-hour drive of their home stadium was propping up get-in ticket prices to unprecedented levels,” said Patrick Ryan, co-founder of Eventellect, a Houston-based ticket distribution company. “Cowboys fans were willing to take the risk of buying tickets and their team not making it because of the uncertainty of what would happen if they did make it.”
It remains to be seen how On Location Experiences, a hospitality company partly owned by NFL owners, will react to the tickets they are offering. The company is the only ticket seller of Super Bowl seats at this point that allows fans to buy specific seats to the game, instead of zones offered by brokers who don’t yet have their hands on the seats they are selling.
Ryan said the money floating around Houston, without the Cowboys fans, will also drop.
“Tickets to all the major parties will come down in value, as there will be fewer fans, in general, coming to town to experience the Super Bowl festivities,” Ryan said.
Should their team make the Super Bowl, Packers and New England Patriots fans have strong travel contingents, but they’ve had their chances to attend the big game over the years.