Monday, December 15, 2014

Final Attendance 2014

Great ACC football RX article among a series of attendance articles.  FSU has a solid year.  Every schools has to work on this area it seems.

Final Attendance 2014

"We haven't looked at football attendance yet now that the regular season has ended, so with no games this week this seems like as good a time as any...

RankTeamAverage
Attendance
GamesAccum
Attendance
Stadium
Capacity
Percent
Capacity
11Florida St.82,2117575,47882,30099.89
14Clemson80,1767561,23081,50098.38
19Notre Dame*80,7956484,77080,795100
26Virginia Tech61,1577428,09965,63293.18
31N C State54,3987380,78557,58394.47
33Miami (FL)52,5187367,62374,91670.1
41North Carolina54,6676328,00063,00086.77
43Louisville52,9726317,82955,00096.31
47Georgia Tech48,5196291,11355,00088.22
49Pittsburgh41,3157289,20465,50063.08
55Virginia39,3207275,24361,50063.94
61Syracuse40,4476242,68252,00077.78
62Boston College34,2707239,89344,50077.01
75Duke27,2917191,03933,94180.41
82Wake Forest27,2106163,26031,50086.38
* Notre Dame only played 2 home games against ACC teams in 2014; they will host 3 teams in 2015.

The Good:
So basically, the ACC has 2.5 teams in the top 25 in terms of attendance, all with average attendance greater than 80,000. There are another 7 teams in the top 50, with averages between 40,000 and 66,000 fans per game.

The Bad:
Three ACC teams - Virginia, Syracuse and Boston College - have stadiums greater than 40,000 seats, but only Syracuse was able to crack 40,000 actual fans per game [barely]. Attendance at UVa games may drop even further if Mike London's team isn't able to turn things around - and quickly - next year. As for Syracuse - they were awful this season; I'm surprised anyone paid to see that train wreck.

The head-scratcher to me is Boston College. Look at individual game numbers:

VisitorAttend.
Pittsburgh30,083
USC41,632
Maine28,676
Colorado St33,632
Clemson42,038
Louisville33,565
Syracuse30,267
TOTAL239,893

First, they didn't sell-out for USC. Second, after beating USC they only sold 28,676 for the game the following weekend against Maine. Finally, the Eagles had, on average, about 10,000 empty seats for each home game, despite having 3 regional games on the home schedule (none of which cracked 31,000 by the way). If Dazzler transforms this team into a winner and no one comes to the games, does it make a sound?

The two teams which bring up the rear in terms of attendance - Duke and Wake Forest - could not have passed Boston College if they sold out every game. That's because those two programs play in tiny little stadiums. However, from a gameday experience point of view, it's often the percent full that's more impressive than the raw numbers. Seen in that light Wake Forest actually does pretty well."


Attendance trends show Florida State smart to add club seating

"Over the summer, we looked at how Florida State was smart to reduce capacity and add luxury eating options, because the surrounding population is so small for a stadium that size.
The CBS link shows that FSU's attendance was up this year, but that's not likely sustainable at that level. Attendance is very much down across college football."
 
 
 
 
"Major college football home attendance in 2014 dipped to its lowest average in 14 years as many schools continue to struggle to fill seats.
Football Bowl Subdivision crowds for home games averaged 43,483 fans per game, down 4 percent from 2013 and the lowest since 42,631 in 2000, according to a CBSSports.com analysis of NCAA attendance data. This marked the sixth straight season crowds were below 46,000 since they peaked at 46,456 in 2008.

The data counts only home games and not neutral-site venues. Figures represent the announced crowd totals schools reported to the NCAA and not necessarily actual attendance.
This was the first year the NCAA counted attendance from six new FBS schools: Georgia Southern, Old Dominion, Charlotte, Appalachian State, Georgia State and Texas San Antonio. But even when removing those teams from the calculation, the average for returning FBS schools (44,544) would be the lowest since 2002.
The good news: 72 percent of the top 25 attendance leaders experienced increases or remained the same (all of the top 25 were from Power Five conferences or Notre Dame). The bad news: Only 48 percent of the remaining Power Five schools maintained or increased their crowd average, many schools in smaller conferences continued to decline.
Ohio State, which averaged 106,296 fans, ended Michigan's 16-year run atop the attendance leaders. Michigan dropped to third at 104,909 behind No. 2 Texas A&M (105,123).
The biggest increases among Power Five schools: Texas A&M (21 percent), Maryland (14 percent), LSU (11 percent), Mississippi State (10 percent), Rutgers (9 percent), Florida State (9 percent) and UCLA (nine percent). Texas A&M, LSU and Mississippi State expanded their stadiums this season. Maryland and Rutgers were new Big Ten members.
The biggest decreases in the Power Five: Purdue (28 percent), Pittsburgh (17 percent), Virginia (15 percent), Kansas (10 percent), Arizona State (9 percent) and Oklahoma State (8 percent).
Three powerhouse programs continue to see declines as they've struggled to win.
Texas dropped to 94,103 per game, down 8 percent since the Longhorns' record-breaking crowds in 2009 when they played for the national championship.
Florida dropped out of the top 10 attendance leaders with 85,834 per game. That's the fourth straight year the Gators were under 90,000 after consistently being above that benchmark.
Michigan is down 7 percent in only two years after peaking at 112,252 in 2012.
Alabama-Birmingham, which recently became the first major program to drop football in 19 years, had the second-largest FBS increase in 2014. The Blazers averaged 21,841 fans per game, better than 36 other FBS programs and up 107 percent from last year.
Conference breakdown
SEC: Once again it led the country in attendance, averaging a record 78,018 fans. Aided by expanded stadiums and Tennessee's fan resurgence, the SEC was up 3 percent. Florida, South Carolina, Kentucky and Vanderbilt were the only SEC teams with a decrease.
Big Ten: Average attendance was 66,939, down from 70,431 last year. That's largely because of introducing Maryland and Rutgers attendance figures -- which are below most Big Ten schools -- into the conference average. Nine of the 14 Big Ten schools improved their crowds.
Big 12: There was a slight dip (1 percent) to 57,624 fans per game. Six of 10 Big 12 schools increased crowds. For the second straight year, the Big 12 had its smallest average since 2005.
Pac 12: Crowds dropped 2 percent to 52,758 and they are down 10 percent since peaking in 2007. Pac-12 attendance leader UCLA ranked 19th nationally. Only four of 12 conference schools had an increase: UCLA, Arizona, Utah and Washington State. A couple of schools' decreases were very minor.
ACC: This league again was last among Power Five schools at 50,016, although its average was up 1 percent in the first year Notre Dame played a condensed schedule against the ACC. Fresh off a national championship, Florida State saw its crowds increase by 9 percent. Half of the ACC's teams had their attendance rise.
FBS Attendance Figures
School
2014 Average
Change from 2013
School
2014 Average
Change from 2013
Ohio State
106,296
+1%
Vanderbilt
34,258
-4%
Texas A&M
105,123
+21%
Kansas
34,077
-10%
Michigan
104,909
-6%
Memphis
33,851
+19%
LSU
101,723
+11%
Boise State
32,504
-5%
Penn State
101,623
+5%
Navy
32,502
-9%
Alabama
101,534
+ < 1%
San Diego State
32,294
-3%
Tennessee
99,754
+4%
Washington State
30,794
+4%
Texas
94,103
-5%
South Florida
30,694
-12%
Georgia
92,746
0%
Cincinnati
28,840
-9%
Nebraska
91,249
+ < 1%
UTEP
28,377
+ < 1%
Auburn
87,451
+2%
Houston
28,311
+17%
Florida
85,834
-2%
Air Force
28,161
-14%
Oklahoma
85,162
+1%
UTSA
27,576
-6%
Florida State
82,211
+9%
Connecticut
27,461
-11%
South Carolina
81,381
-1%
Marshall
27,461
+10%
Notre Dame
80,795
0%
Hawaii
27,451
-11%
Clemson
80,176
-2%
Duke
27,291
+5%
Wisconsin
79,520
+1%
Wake Forest
27,210
-4%
UCLA
76,650
+9%
Colorado State
26,575
+43%
Michigan St.
74,681
+3%
UL Lafayette
25,775
-1%
USC
73,272
- < 1%
Tulane
25,012
+27%
Iowa
67,512
+1%
Arkansas State
24,861
- < 1%
Arkansas
66,521
+8%
Nevada
23,862
-4%
Missouri
65,285
+3%
Temple
23,370
+4%
Washington
64,508
-6%
Appalachian St.
23,166
-7%
Ole Miss
61,547
+4%
Southern Miss
22,739
- < 1%
Virginia Tech
61,157
-4%
New Mexico
21,937
-7%
Miss. State
61,127
+10%
UAB
21,841
+107%
Texas Tech
58,934
+2%
SMU
21,528
+15%
Kentucky
57,572
-3%
Ga. Southern
21,102
+42%
Oregon
57,422
- < 1%
Texas State
20,598
+14%
Arizona State
57,179
-9%
Ohio
20,515
-1%
BYU
57,141
-7%
Utah State
20,467
-12%
West Virginia
56,686
+7%
Buffalo
20,403
-10%
North Carolina
54,667
+6%
Old Dominion
20,118
0%
N.C. State
54,398
+2%
Louisiana Tech
20,054
+7%
Okla. State
54,387
-8%
Tulsa
19,647
-1%
Kansas State
53,081
+ < 1%
Wyoming
19,599
+1%
Louisville
52,972
+ < 1%
Toledo
19,548
+6%
Miami (Fla.)
52,518
-2%
North Texas
19,271
-8%
Iowa State
52,197
-6%
Rice
18,562
-1%
Arizona
50,710
+6%
La.-Monroe
18,108
+6%
Rutgers
50,632
+9%
South Alabama
17,445
+10%
Georgia Tech
48,519
-1%
Middle Tenn.
17,408
-7%
Minnesota
47,865
+ < 1%
Troy
16,767
-11%
Stanford
47,862
-6%
Central Michigan
16,306
+23%
California
47,675
-3%
W. Kentucky
16,306
-11%
Maryland
46,981
+14%
Massachusetts
16,088
+2%
Baylor
46,710
+2%
Miami (Ohio)
15,906
- < 1%
Utah
46,437
+3%
UNLV
15,674
-9%
East Carolina
44,786
+2%
W. Michigan
15,625
-10%
TCU
44,719
+3%
Bowling Green
15,228
- < 1%
Oregon State
42,176
-2%
San Jose State
15,068
-8%
Indiana
41,657
-6%
E. Michigan
15,025
+271%
Illinois
41,549
-5%
Georgia State
15,006
-4%
Pittsburgh
41,315
-17%
Florida Atlantic
14,122
-3%
Syracuse
40,447
+6%
Northern Illinois
13,563
-34%
Virginia
39,320
-15%
Kent State
13,544
-20%
Northwestern
38,613
-2%
*Charlotte
13,272
-15%
UCF
37,812
-10%
Idaho
12,886
-13%
Colorado
37,778
-2%
New Mexico St.
12,269
-24%
Purdue
35,269
-28%
FIU
11,966
-23%
Fresno State
34,876
-6%
Ball State
9,389
-38%
Boston Coll.
34,270
+4%
Akron
9,170
-49%
Army
34,262
+1%
 

No comments:

Post a Comment