Re: Frozen 4 seat locations
My wife and I each received an email from the NCAA offering the opportunity to purchase tickets in a presale before they go on sale to the general public. The presale will end on 27 November at 11:59 pm or when all tickets are sold. I believe that they got our emails emails from the annual raffle the NCAA holds for tickets to the next FF, so they are still marketing FF tickets to the college hockey fan base.
Which is the same announced deadline for priority holders at all levels to purchase tickets. I'm presuming that if you want to earn a priority point for 2016, you need to order by 11/27. If this is a live issue for someone -- meaning you'd like to earn the point but would rather pay later -- contact Customer Service and see if this is a possibility.
Sean, would you repost your info up on the sticky? I didn't receive this particular e-mail. And in any event, I don't need to steal your thunder!
Single seats are not a great representation of how things are going. That's not to say things are going well, and I'd keep an eye on where pairs can still be picked up.
Depends on the question you're asking. I'd explain it this way:
In virtually every case, demand for singles will be lower than demand for pairs or larger blocks of seats. For that reason, they will sell more slowly in the initial sale, and command lower prices in the secondary market.
If you're hoping to buy directly from the venue and won't consider singles, then of course that info seems irrelevant. If you're trying to establish the current market value of a pair of seats you already hold, the value of a single will be misleadingly low.
HOWEVER, the market for single seats usually runs somewhat parallel to the rest of the market. So if you factor in the lower demand, it can give you an indirect measure of the rest of the market. More information is always better, of course. But the supply of singles is certainly a relevant portion of the larger story.
In this case, the main relevance of singles is that they can offer a significantly better vantage point than the remaining pairs. With 40 such seats still available in the Lower Bowl, (as per Sean) you might very well find a couple of seats fairly close together in a desirable section.