The Niagara Falls Review

Hosting fee caused high Memorial Cup prices, impacting attendance

- RYAN MCKENNA

REGINA — The organizing committee chair for the 100th Memorial Cup says a high fee to host the tournament has caused increased ticket prices and impacted attendance.

Shaun Semple said that the Regina Pats, a team in which he is a co-owner, had to pay

$3.65 million to host the Canadian major junior championsh­ip.

He said that ticket prices start at $75 per game and that the Pats owners expect to lose upwards of $2 million between the tournament and opening ceremony, which featured a performanc­e by the Eagles at Mosaic Stadium.

This year’s Memorial Cup had yet to sell out through the first five games at Brandt Centre, which has a capacity of 6,484.

Semple added that ticket sales for the tournament are around expected so far.

He said the ownership group wanted to bring the event to Regina in the team’s 100th year ever since the five businessme­n purchased the franchise in 2014.

“We planned to lose money when we brought it in because we knew we couldn’t charge enough based on the number of seats we had and the fees we had to pay in order for us to break even,” Semple said Tuesday.

Regina’s opener against the Ontario Hockey League’s Hamilton Bulldogs had an attendance of 5,678 — the lowest of the tournament’s first four games.

A Twitter user with the handle @tberbs18 said in a tweet on Friday: “Sad the Pats have turned this into a cash grab!”

Carley Olfert is a billet mom for Swift Current Broncos players Colby Sissons and Tyler Steenberge­n. She said that she spent $197 for three top row tickets to Saturday’s Swift Current opener against the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League’s Titan.

That game had an announced attendance of 6,237 — the highest number to date at the Memorial Cup.

“Are tickets overpriced? Absolutely,” Olfert said. “Would we miss it for the world? Absolutely not. You got to pay for these experience­s. We have to come and support them when it’s two hours down the road. How could you miss this? You can’t.”

Semple said that organizers compared prices against last year’s tournament in Windsor, Ont., and the 2016 event in Red Deer, Alta. The Brier, which Brandt Centre also hosted in March, was looked at, as well.

“We hope people will understand that there is a limit of how much that investment is,” Semple said. “But at the end of the day, we wanted this to be special, we wanted to have one heck of an opening ceremony.”

Tournament ticket packages for Pats season ticket holders ranged upwards to $695. The Halifax Mooseheads, who are hosting next year’s tournament, have already sent their season ticket holders an email saying that tourney passes will be $320.

Semple said that Halifax is able to sell its tickets at a significan­tly lower price due to the fact that they’re paying less than half the hosting fee than Regina and have twice as many seats at Scotiabank Centre.

He said that if he had more seats at Brandt Centre that he could charge less. “The difference was that they (Halifax) went ahead and made a conscious decision bidding for next year to prescribe the fee,” Semple said.

Semple said that the hometown Pats getting knocked out in the first round of the Western Hockey League playoffs made it tougher to build excitement early.

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