Dayton Daily News

OHIO ST. TICKETS? GET SET TO PAY UP

Upper level end zone won’t require donations on top of ticket prices.

- By Laura A. Bischoff Staff Writer

Ohio State University trustees on Thursday approved a new football ticketing system that will allocate the best seats in the stadium to those who donate the most.

The university’s new plan makes no changes for 2021 but switches to a “per-seat contributi­on” pricing model beginning with the 2022 season. Most season tickethold­ers will be required to make contributi­ons on top of paying for tickets.

“There is going to be some people who are upset,” said Gene Smith, OSU athletics director since 2005. “Then you’re going to have that constituen­cy who will pay less. There will be people who pay less (for their season tickets.)”

Ohio Stadium will be divided into six zones. In zone 6, 14,000 season tickets will be available for purchase at face value with no required additional donation. Zone 6 seats are in the upper levels of the end zone. Seats in Zone 1 are on the 50 yard line and will require a $1,500 per-seat contributi­on on top of the $1,287 cost for tickets to the eight home games. Contributi­on requiremen­ts and ticket prices range for the other zones but it boils down to the better the seat, the higher the donation and ticket prices.

Season ticket holders will also be required to make contributi­ons of $3,000 to $6,000, plus pay $400 to $480 for parking passes. The seat contributi­on will offset the required donation for

parking spots.

Student seats will not be subject to the new system and tickets will remain priced at $34 per game. Likewise, suite seats will not fall under the new system.

Ohio State has more than 1,000 athletes participat­ing in 36 varsity sports. It is one of about two dozen college athletics programs nationwide that are self-sustaining and do not rely on student fees or university subsidies. OSU Athletics typically transfers $52 million a year to the university’s general fund.

Smith, however, projects a $60 million deficit for the athletics department this year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Smith anticipate­s that the department will borrow from the university and pay back the interest-bearing loan over five to seven years to erase the deficit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States