The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Falcons move to mobile-only ticketing to enter stadium

- By Tim Tucker tim.tucker@ajc.com

When Falcons fans return to games, there will be a change in the way many of them enter Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

The Falcons will adopt mobile-only ticketing, meaning fans exclusivel­y will enter the gates by holding their smartphone close to a scanner that will read a constantly refreshing bar code.

The Falcons eliminated paper tickets when the stadium opened in 2017, and since then the team had offered the option of scanning mobile devices or season-ticket member cards to gain entry to games. The cards now are being eliminated, to the displeasur­e of some fans.

“It’s a continuing evolution, no different from when we went from (paper) tickets to cards,” said Don Rovak, the Falcons’ vice president of sales and service. “When we moved into

Mercedes-Benz Stadium, we didn’t think the time was right at that point just to go all-mobile.”

In an email sent to season ticket holders this week, the Falcons said the change will provide “a safer game day experience by limiting unnecessar­y contacts,” will personaliz­e the fan experience and will reduce ticket fraud.

Some fans have expressed unhappines­s on social media and elsewhere about the eliminatio­n of the season ticket game-day cards. A 12-year season ticket holder, who asked not to be named, said it was “misleading” for the Falcons to cite safety as a reason for eliminatin­g the plastic cards. The cards, like mobile devices, were a contactles­s method of admission at the gates, the season ticket holder said, adding in an email the sports industry “has more important and factual concerns to address around fan safety.”

Rovak said the Falcons’ change will eliminate the contact that occurs when season ticket holders give their cards to other fans. But he said the coronaviru­s pandemic didn’t solely drive the change, which he said will allow the Falcons to know who the end users of tickets are and to communicat­e with them.

“It wasn’t the decision of, ‘Oh, we really didn’t want to do this, but now given the environmen­t it’s the right move,’” Rovak said. “Instead, it was more (a case of being) consistent with everything we’re trying to deliver from a fan-experience side and from a healthand-safety side.”

The Falcons’ move continues a widespread trend in pro sports toward mobileonly ticketing. Nine NFL teams mandated that as their only option last year, Rovak said. Atlanta United made the change at the start of its 2020 season.

Rovak acknowledg­ed the

Falcons have heard from some fans who don’t want to deal with the technology of mobile ticketing, but said he believes they’ll become comfortabl­e with it.

Among the questions fans may have is what to do if their phone’s battery dies before they get to the gate. Go to the main box office at Gate 1 for help, the Falcons said. What about any season ticket holders who don’t have a smartphone? Contact your ticket representa­tive, the team said. Can screenshot­s of tickets be used for admission? No, because of the dynamic bar codes. Will fans still be able to sell or transfer their tickets? Yes, electronic­ally.

The Falcons’ regular-season opener is Sept. 13 against Seattle at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. But with most sports still shut down by COVID19, it remains to be seen whether the NFL season will start as scheduled and, if it does, whether there will be fans in attendance.

 ?? CHUCK BURTON / AP 2019 ?? ACC Commission­er John Swofford said, “I would emphasize that we are going into this year with the anticipati­on of playing at this point in time.”
CHUCK BURTON / AP 2019 ACC Commission­er John Swofford said, “I would emphasize that we are going into this year with the anticipati­on of playing at this point in time.”

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