Tailgating was great with Bustle and he never went over 6 wins.
The people who were already in the parking lot for Bustle, came into the stadium for Hud's winning ways.
When Napier won, there was no one in the parking lot to draw from.
Tailgating was great with Bustle and he never went over 6 wins.
The people who were already in the parking lot for Bustle, came into the stadium for Hud's winning ways.
When Napier won, there was no one in the parking lot to draw from.
Is there a way to incorporate the "conflicting events" of children that harms attendancr into an attendance boon. Maybe sponsor a youth basketball league at bourgeois, have those games let out just in time for tailgate?
Same with tee ball, kickball or slo pitch softball at the intramural/fraternity fields, etc tennis or pickleball lessons at the cajun tennis complex, swimming, etc etc. Free parkimgnif you are early for those youth events and dont move car in between
Hunting seasons are supposedly based on science, but i findnitn odd that the seasons dont change that often. Seems over time the animals' patterns would change more than is evidenced. If hunting season is a big problem for attendance why not move the seasons from time to time and coordinate cajuns schedule accordingly
Great synopsis
I will add that the reduced attendance towards the end of Hud’s tenure coincided with the downturn of the local O&G economy in 2015. Local companies and individuals were not spending as much money on entertainment during that time. That market has improved since then but 2015 was a bloodbath in that sector.
Since that time, it appears more of our fund raising efforts have been in other industries
There's two ways to improve gameday experience:
1. ACTIVE: Hire a person or team that focuses solely on addressing issues, improving interactions, and creating moments that people remember when they leave the stadium. (ex. Savannah Bananas)
2. PASSIVE: Improve leg room, install new seats, let people check themselves out at concessions, etc. (ex. you can guess)
Both will require a monetary investment.
Which one do you think will actually improve gameday? Which one do you think the university will go with?
To me, one of the biggest in-game improvements we can make to get fans engaged is revamping the marching band. I don't know how you tackle that from an athletic department standpoint since the college of the arts doesn't answer to the athletic department. But instead of cheerleaders trying to start chants, the band needs to look across the basin and see that most chants are started and sustained by great fight songs (Hey Fighting Tiger, Chinese Bandits, Hold That Tiger, etc.) But marching bands ARE college football. Grow the brass section and ask the woodwinds to stay home (sorry woodwinds). Play loud as ____. No casual football fan cares if you're playing "proper." Blast it.
As always, we're starting with zero tradition in that space. And the RESPECT tune is not it.
Current director for the marching band's resume doesn't exactly scream fun (at football games). No offense to his musical talents.
Then, the university does not understand A) our demographic and B) our history. We are dealing with a fan base that has been given a lot of "free" for decades. And now, it's expected for this same fan base to just pay the fees. I totally get adding value and bringing in more revenue to pay for these projects that we are undergoing. But there is a difference in increasing a few things here and there and nickel and diming every little amenity. We tried it with baseball with the parking passes and tailgating. We have changed the football model more than once with the seat donations and champions fund. It comes to a point where fans see through this and assume that they might be getting taken advantage of. Imagine if Texas Roadhouse started charging Ruth Chris prices for a ribeye. The place would be empty within a few weeks.
We need to understand the area better and quit blaming the locals for not supporting to the standard that we can. Restaurants don't blame customers for not showing up. They improve their food to get people there. We should do the same.
To me this is simple, If I was in the position i would set up meetings with the director of bands and the assistant director and provide money to allocate for more marching band stand tunes. As a former POA member and band nerd I clearly have a vision on what would work. Now they may have a different vision and since they have to teach it to its members they would have the final say on what gets played and what doesnt, but there is no reason why the two should not be able to work together to increase fan engagement for the fans.
Lets start with a fanfare and something along the lines i would want something like this coming out the tunnel.
Then you can move around and want more pieces of music like this. It doesnt have to be this but we need more cheers etc. and things that are more jazzy, or cajun!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lQOcRt...aW5nIGJhbmQ%3D
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d8r99x...Bqb2xpZSBibG9u
You ask a fair question. Will keep feedback to only waterfowl and deer seasons. For a number of years the Louisiana West Zone opening day is second Saturday of November and East Zone opens the 3rd Saturday of November. My understanding is bird migrations are driven by changing photo period, the relative length of day and night during a 24 hour period. Weather and food sources also greatly influence waterfowl migrations, too. Louisiana duck season is among the latest opening dates in the USA since we're at the bottom of the flyway. When college football regular season was 11 games there was less overlap. There is much more college football season overlap with whitetail deer season. Louisiana (LDWF) has 10 distinct 'areas' with staggered opening dates beginning in mid-October. By 3rd week of November all 10 deer areas are open for rifle hunting. Traditional date for deer bow season opener is October 1st. IMO, LDWF has fine tuned season dates and number of days. They make a few calendar tweaks now and then based on science or harvest data. Other than a home game being scheduled on Thanksgiving weekend, or 11 a.m. kickoffs, I don't see hunting season being a major negative influence on football attendance.
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