Los Angeles Times

THE COST OF A FINAL CHEER

Tickets to Kobe’s farewell command substantia­l prices on secondary market.

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com Twitter: @kbaxter11

The Golden State Warriors set an NBA record Wednesday night in Oakland as the Lakers’ Kobe Bryant memorably headed for the door with 60 points at Staples Center.

And judging from the price of tickets on the secondary market, an emotional goodbye was worth a lot more than a piece of history.

The average resale price for a ticket to Bryant’s final game was $1,014 on Stubhub.com at midday Wednesday, about five times the average for a typical regular-season game and about 18 times more than last season’s final regularsea­son home game against the Sacramento Kings.

The most expensive ticket Stubhub sold went for $27,500.

“This is like an NBA Finals without anything on the line,” Stubhub spokeswoma­n Alison Salcedo said. The Lakers headed into their regular-season finale against Utah with 16 wins, second-fewest in the NBA. L.A. won, of course, 101-96.

In Oakland, tickets for the Warriors’ game with Memphis, in which Golden State broke the NBA record for victories in a season with 73, were going for an average of $545 on the secondary market. The most expensive ticket sold went for $9,600 while the cheapest was $339.

“There’s still certainly interest in the Warriors’ game,” said Salcedo, who said the Lakers and Warriors combined were accounting for about 85% of Stubhub’s NBA sales for Wednesday’s games. “It’s not a cheap ticket. It’s just not accompanie­d by the hype of Kobe and the Lakers in Los Angeles right now.

“We’ve had an entire season to build up to this moment. The hype for this in Los Angeles, it creates a lot of excitement. And you’re seeing the pinnacle of it with the exclusivit­y of getting into this game.”

Barry Rudin, founder of Barry’s Tickets, which has an office across the street from Staples Center, had Lakers tickets on his website Wednesday with an asking price of nearly $20,000. On Ebay, there were ticket auctions beginning at $5,000.

“People have come from all over the country to see Kobe all year. All over the world,” said Rudin, who planned to take his son to the game. “It’s been a real big deal. You really just get to say thank you, cheer for him and say goodbye.”

Meanwhile, Rudin dropped the asking price for his most expensive courtside seats at Oakland’s Oracle Arena from $10,000 to $6,000 and still had no takers.

“It’s a big game. It’s huge,” he said of the Warriors’ game. “It’s just Kobe’s bigger. And L.A.’s bigger.”

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