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Super Bowl ticket market cools and here's one of the reasons: No Cowboys

January 30, 2017

Conference battle produces competitive Pro Bowl for NFL

HOUSTON - Even after losing in the playoffs, the Dallas Cowboys, Green Bay Packers and Pittsburgh Steelers continue to have their fingerprints on this Super Bowl. For the NFL's ticket-resale business, the absences of those franchises have clipped the wings of what could have been a soaring market.

With each passing day since the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons secured their spots in Super Bowl LI, the secondary ticket market has consistently seen the demand get softer. The biggest hit was sustained when the Cowboys lost in the divisional round of the playoffs, essentially gutting what could have been a robust local market for Super Bowl tickets. It got worse in the conference title games, when two more teams with solid traveling fan bases - the Packers and Steelers - both lost.

The result has been a little bit of havoc for the bottom line of the brokers who are hoping to turn the NFL's grandest event into an annual score.

Both the average ticket price and the “get-in” price (the cost of the cheapest available ticket) have plummeted as the big event has drawn nearer. Six ticket brokers who spoke to Yahoo! Sports about their holdings all said the same thing: inventory is up and demand is soft - and that's driving tickets down in price.

[Ditch the paper and pen - play Squares Pick'em for the Big Game!]

“If the Cowboys were here, you'd see low-level seats, ‘get-in' prices, they'd be at least $1,000 higher than where they are right now - at least,” one major U.S. ticket broker said. “It could have been even more. It might have been $2,000 higher just to get in. The $2,200 to $2,500 tickets you're seeing could have easily been $4,000 to $5,000. It was that big of a deal. Who knows? But our calls from the average guy who still didn't have tickets was probably cut in half or more when Dallas lost. And it got even worse when Green Bay and Pittsburgh went out.”

Added one mid-level broker, “Dallas made a huge difference. You lost a lot of buyers in Texas and a good segment of fans in Mexico that would have driven prices. The international market in Mexico, people don't think of that. I had brokers telling me that they had fans in Mexico lined up to buy tickets if Dallas made it.”

The fallout? As of Sunday afternoon, the cost to get into NRG Stadium for the game was a shade above $2,100 on national broker Vivid Seats. Other major brokers like StubHub and PrimeSport were just above $2,200. That's expected to drop a little, but the brokers who spoke to Yahoo all agreed that the “get-in” floor for Super Bowl LI will likely solidify around $2,000. The brokers all agreed that the average ticket price - which has been hovering around $4,500 this weekend - is expected to solidify somewhere around $4,000.

Asked to name the last Super Bowl that had softened considerably as the game approached, a few of the brokers pointed to XLVIII, when the Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks faced off at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. That game actually had the “get-in” price for tickets dip to below $2,000 a few hours before kickoff.