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mr.x
September 10th, 2008, 09:12 AM
Buy a ticket bundle for best chance of Vancouver 2010 tickets: Vanoc

Derrick Penner, Vancouver Sun
Published: Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The public's best chance to get tickets to premier 2010 Olympic events will be by purchasing bundled ticket packages that Olympic organizers are putting together, officials have revealed.

Vancouver Olympic organizers will open sales for the biggest block of tickets available to the public starting Oct. 3, and have begun a three-week campaign to unveil the information would-be buyers need to try to gain access to the high-demand sports.

There won't be a rush because tickets will not be sold on a first-come-first-served basis. Games organizers will take applications for tickets from Oct. 3 to Nov. 7; no matter when they arrive, all applications will receive equal consideration.

Purchasers will also need to pull out their Visa cards. Although Vanoc won't charge their cards right away, a credit card number will be needed to secure a purchase order. Visa will be the only one accepted, since the company is a top Winter Games sponsor.

However, there will also be a method to buy tickets using a cheque or money order.

Priority for filling public ticket orders, however, will go to those who want to buy what Vanoc officials are calling Olympic experience packages: multi-day packages that bundle at least one event ticket per day, plus one ticket to one of the nightly victory ceremonies at BC Place Stadium, where the majority of medals will be presented.

"[Package purchasers] will be seated before [individual ticket purchasers] at an event," said Caley Denton, vice-president of ticketing and consumer marketing for the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Games [Vanoc].

"Having said that, we will never sell out the full public allocation [of tickets] through packages," Denton added.

The packages will be designed much like cable television bundles, but Dave Cobb, Vanoc's executive-vice president for revenue and marketing, denied the exercise is about offloading tickets to less desirable sports along with seats to marquee events.

"It isn't about filling weak events," Cobb said, because Vanoc officials know they will be able to sell out venues.

"Our objective is getting people into seats and getting as many tickets as possible into the hands of the public," he said.

Details about Olympic-experience packages will be released Sept. 17, when Vanoc relaunches its website. Denton said there will be two different programs, one aimed at short-term visitors and another for local residents to take advantage of, with event tickets for evening and weekend sporting sessions.

Cobb added that packages were designed based on consumer research and the logistics of getting purchasers to all the events.

Nor will they come at a discount. Denton said prices will be the total face-value amount of the event tickets, including the victory ceremony.

Vanoc has also revealed ticket details for the nightly victory ceremonies. They will make available 30,000 tickets for the events, which will include entertainment by top acts, as well as presentation of most of the competition medals.

Some 10,000 tickets will be free, but the bulk of 20,000 will be sold for $22 each.

Cobb, in a briefing, said Vanoc is now confident it will exceed its $232-million revenue target for ticket sales, based on its market research and requests for tickets by the so-called Olympic family of national Olympic committees, sponsors and sports federations.

The $231 million figure in Vanoc's current budget was based on an estimate that it would sell almost 90 per cent of available tickets.

"We know if [tickets] go on sale to the public, and they don't sell as many as expected, we'll go back to the Olympic family and fill their orders," Cobb said.

As it is, Cobb added that Vanoc won't be able to fill all of the requests that Olympic family members have placed for tickets.

Vanoc will have two million tickets to sell, 1.6 million to the sports events and opening and closing ceremonies, the rest to the nightly ceremonies.

Vanoc has vowed that 70 per cent of those 1.6 million competition and ceremonies tickets will be available to the public. More than 60 per cent of total tickets will be available in Canada.

Vanoc will only sell tickets inside Canada. National Olympic committees in participating countries are responsible for selling allocations of tickets in their territories, which will also begin Oct. 3.

It won't be 70 per cent across the board, though, Cobb explained. He said the proportion of seats taken up by the public and that taken by the Olympic family will vary depending on demands by the Olympic family.

However, Cobb said that no fewer than 30 per cent of any one event's tickets - even for the figure skating and hockey finals - will go to the public.

One challenge, Cobb added, was balancing all the Olympic-family requests for tickets, which in some cases exceeded the capacity of venues where events will be held. Vanoc could have filled GM Place twice over with Olympic-family members, for instance.

The allocations that Vanoc has given to the Olympic family members, which includes almost 200 constituent groups, are with the International Olympic Committee for final approval, which Cobb is confident Vanoc will receive.

He said the IOC has approved Vanoc's global allocation of 30 per cent of all tickets to the Olympic family.

"The result of it is that nobody [in the Olympic family] will get everything they ordered, especially for top events," Cobb said.

While he expects some "push-back" when groups learn what tickets they have been awarded, Cobb said the IOC and key sponsors have been supportive of Vanoc's campaign to fill every available seat and avoid some of the embarrassments that pictures of large blocks of empty seats provided at the Beijing and Turin Games.

depenner@vancouversun.com

nova9
September 11th, 2008, 05:00 AM
Is anyone here going for this package? I for one just want to buy opening and closing ceremony tickets. And perhaps a few nightly event tickets.

Yellow Fever
September 11th, 2008, 05:54 AM
Can not afford to go to any event, i will just stay home and watch the games on tv.

DrT
September 12th, 2008, 05:06 AM
The entire rest of the world (outside of residents of Canada and "the Olympic Family") will be left with 10% of the total tickets.

I'm putting in my requests for events in Vancouver (not Whistler) and hope for the best in the lottery. I put in for hockey, figure skating, short track and speed skating. Medal ceremonies and VIP parties also if I can get them.

Heck, I'll be happy to just get medal ceremony tickets at BC Place and party with the night crowds. They are the cheapest I believe. :lol:

mr.x
October 3rd, 2008, 04:22 AM
A reminder that ticket registration begins at midnight tonight and ends on Nov. 7.






ROFLMAO:


Olympic tickets on sale Friday, best package costs $285,000 (no typo)

Jeff Lee, Canwest News Service
Published: Thursday, October 02, 2008

VANCOUVER - Wealthy supporters of the 2010 Winter Games are being offered an Olympic dream that includes 100 prime tickets to the events of their choice, a car and driver, concierge service and even a spot in the torch relay.

The cost: $285,000 - not including GST of $14,251.

But hurry, because there are only 100 packages available.

About 2.0 million Olympic event tickets go on sale to the public Friday across Canada and around the world. The Vancouver Organizing Committee anticipates many events will be sold out over the five-week application period and that a lottery will be required to distribute tickets.

But organizing committee vice-president Dave Cobb acknowledged Thursday that a small group of spectators with deep pockets won't have to queue for tickets and they will get access to some things that ordinary spectators can't have during the Games.

The promotion, called "The Vancouver 2010 Club - A Patron's Program," will put $28.5 million in Vanoc's coffers if it is fully subscribed. A full-colour brochure details what a patron can buy with a $285,000 donation.

"In recognition of the considerable personal support you have given . . . Vancouver 2010 Club members will enjoy personal priority access to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games," the brochure states. "Each patron and their guest(s) will have the pleasure of a unique Games experience by receiving premium event tickets, personalized transportation and top-calibre hospitality."

Cobb said the organizing committee has already received commitments for about a third of the packages, and cheques for at least 10 of them. The program, which is similar to one at the 2002 Salt Lake Winter Games, is designed to tap into wealthy donors for whom prime event access isn't necessarily the primary objective.

The 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City offered a three-level donor program of $1 million, $500,000 and $100,000, with varying levels of access.

The tickets will come out of the portion the organizing committee has set aside for the Olympic family, which includes sponsors, the media, sport federations and the IOC.

Olympic tickets were to go on sale at midnight under a program that is designed to foil scalpers and ticket hogs. From now until Nov. 7, the organizing committee will accept applications for ticket packages. Those sports that sell out quickly will go to a lottery system for distribution.

jefflee@vancouversun.com

Yellow Fever
October 3rd, 2008, 07:49 AM
I will take 5 packages for my family! :D

vahebaronian
October 23rd, 2008, 12:50 AM
Just bought two tickets for the bobsleigh (pretty much the only tickets I can afford) abt wait though, visited Vancouver in 2002, and absolutely loved it

DrT
October 27th, 2008, 08:17 PM
Just bought two tickets for the bobsleigh (pretty much the only tickets I can afford) abt wait though, visited Vancouver in 2002, and absolutely loved it

I too was a little taken aback by the ticket prices. Buying them in the US is about 50% more expensive than Canadians can get them for, considering the higher nominal prices (by about a third) plus the exchange rate. I'm cutting way back on the events that I'll go to.


BTW, does anyone know why tickets for the Victory Ceremonies each night at BC Place are not for sale yet? Are they for sale in Canada?

mr.x
October 27th, 2008, 11:45 PM
^ it's possible that it's because they want to include the artist acts (i.e. Sarah Mclachlan) in the ticket info, and that they haven't booked all the acts yet.

Yellow Fever
October 31st, 2008, 05:33 AM
All of the $34,500 2010 Olympic tickets sold


The Province; News Services
Published: Thursday, October 30, 2008

Rich sports fans hoping to plunk down $34,500 on a luxury ticket package to the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver are out of luck.

The 120 packages available -- which include guaranteed seats to the men's gold-medal hockey game, along with perks such as hotel stays, meals, airport pickups and host services -- sold out two weeks after they went on sale, Jean-Paul Modde, president of hospitality provider CoSport, said yesterday.

Available on a first-come, first-served basis, the packages went for $34,500 a couple.

Other packages ranging from $4,000 to $21,000 are still available, but they too are being snatched up fast, particularly those that include tickets to the Games' opening ceremonies.




© The Vancouver Province 2008

Tri-City Guy
November 12th, 2008, 02:46 AM
I request two packages totalling around $2300.00 - the opening and closing events are what I want. God forbid I actually get my selections. My poor Visa will suffer heart failure!

Yellow Fever
November 14th, 2008, 07:13 AM
Most Olympic tickets go to lottery

By Jeff Nagel

Published: November 13, 2008 3:00 PM
Updated: November 13, 2008 3:51 PM

Olympics fans have applied for $345 million worth of tickets to the 2010 Winter Games.

More than a third of the total – $135 million – was submitted on Nov. 7, the final day for the first phase of ticket requests.

VANOC officials say 70 per cent of the sessions in Vancouver and Whistler are oversubscribed and tickets will be allocated by lottery.

The most popular event is the men's gold medal hockey game, which drew 140,000 ticket requests.

Other popular events include the opening ceremonies (84,000 tickets requested), the women's hockey gold medal game (41,000 ticket requests) and and short track speed skating (34,000 ticket requests.)

Also in high demand were tickets to the men's halfpipe snowboard competition, gold-medal curling finals, and the men's four-man bobsleigh final.

VANOC says the total ticket requests are now four and a half times what had been committed in the initial ticket sales phase for the Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympics.

Tickets that weren't bought in the initial request period will be re-released for sale in December to people who made requests and have an account with the Games.

All remaining unsold tickets after that will be offered up to the general public on a first-come first-served basis in 2009.

Paralympic tickets will go on sale May 6.

Yellow Fever
November 15th, 2008, 05:51 AM
Olympic speed skating tickets will sell out

By Matthew Hoekstra - Richmond Review

Published: November 14, 2008 5:00 PM

Expectations that demand would outstrip supply for Olympic events at the Richmond oval have proven correct.

More people have requested seats at long track speed skating events than there are tickets available, the Vancouver Organizing Committee for 2010 announced Thursday.

Those events, along with all figure skating, short track speed skating, higher rounds of men’s ice hockey and opening and closing ceremonies will all go to a lottery.

“Speed skating is traditionally a very popular event in the Olympics, and made more so by the fact that Canada is obviously a powerhouse in the sport these days, and is expected to do so very well in the Olympics,” said city spokesperson Ted Townsend.

“We think we have a little advantage in having what is the premiere venue for the Games.”

Undoubtedly some ticket buyers may only have a passing interest in the sport, but are drawn by the venue.

“Anybody who’s been in the building or seen it has just raved about it, so I think it’s going to be a unique experience unto itself during the Games,” said Townsend.

There’s proven interest in the oval, from the 8,000 people who signed a section of roof, to a school program announced last week that now has a wait-list.

That program gives school children a chance to skate on the oval. The first phase of that program had 6,600 spots. After a few hours of registration, all the spots on the first phase had been filled.

“The school program and some of the other 2010 programs we have recognize that demand is probably going to exceed supply during the Games, so we want to create as many fun and exciting opportunities as we can for people to come into the oval... or take part in other Olympic activities...” said Townsend.

The deadline for the first request period of tickets was Nov. 7. Total requests for tickets amounted to $345 million—almost five times the value of tickets available. In comparison, at Salt Lake City in 2002, initial demand was valued at just $75 million.

Tickets not yet snapped up will be re-released for sale from Dec. 8 to 22 exclusively to Canadian residents who submitted a request during the first period. Any tickets still remaining will go on sale on a first-come, first-served basis in 2009.

Coun. Bill McNulty said he wasn’t surprised by the demand for speed skating tickets.

“I could have predicted that,” he said. “Speed skating is one of those venues where the greatest numbers of medals are to be garnered at any one site, so you would expect the popularity.”

DrT
November 16th, 2008, 09:59 PM
^^
Crap, I put in for speed skating, short track and one figure skating event. We'll see if I get anything.:ohno:

dleung
November 17th, 2008, 12:10 AM
Olympic tickets on sale Friday, best package costs $285,000 (no typo)

Jeff Lee, Canwest News Service
Published: Thursday, October 02, 2008

VANCOUVER - Wealthy supporters of the 2010 Winter Games are being offered an Olympic dream that includes 100 prime tickets to the events of their choice, a car and driver, concierge service and even a spot in the torch relay.

The cost: $285,000 - not including GST of $14,251.

But hurry, because there are only 100 packages available.


Wow, i'd rather spend that money on a little space flight with Virgin Galactic and have $85,000 left over.

Yellow Fever
November 29th, 2008, 05:25 AM
Last-minute Olympic ticket warning

Derrick Penner, Vancouver Sun
Published: Friday, November 28, 2008

The Vancouver Olympic Organizing Committee (Vanoc) has issued a last-minute warning to all hopeful 2010 ticket buyers that it will cancel orders without warning if a buyer's Visa card is declined.

Vanoc will start processing successful ticket orders and charging Visa accounts starting Dec. 1 at the earliest, Caley Denton, Vanoc's vice-president ticketing and consumer marketing, said. And if a successful purchaser hasn't cleared enough credit on his card, Denton added that they won't necessarily have time to stop and clear up the situation with the customer.

"We're doing thousands of transactions," Denton said. "We'll do the best we can, but people need to be prepared that if we have to move on, we have to move on."

Denton added that Vanoc tried to be clear with ticket buyers from the beginning of the order process that if they hadn't paid by cheque or money order, Vanoc has to be able to charge the Visa card number provided for the full amount of the order customers asked for.

Denton said Vanoc sent an e-mail note out to everyone who placed orders warning them to make sure their cards were clear and let their financial institutions know that a charge shows up from Vancouver 2010 Ticketing is a legitimate charge.

On Friday, Denton said Vanoc was running lotteries for the events that were oversubscribed. All successful purchasers should receive notice of what tickets they've been allocated by Dec. 10.

Canadians, between Oct. submitted orders worth $345 million, when Vanoc only has tickets to satisfy a fraction of the amount. Vanoc reported that 120 of 170 event sessions were oversubscribed and had to be sent to lottery to award tickets.

Lottery events include the opening ceremonies, figure skating, short-track and long-track speed skating and men's hockey from the quarter-finals through to the gold-medal game.

As for ticket sales outside of Canada, Denton said Vanoc has only received reports from the United States Olympic Committee and its sales agent, JetSet Sports, which have also reported being "oversubscribed."

National Olympic committees in Olympic nations are responsible for international ticket sales, either directly or through agents. Between domestic sales in Canada, international sales and sales to members of the "Olympic family" - sponsors, NOC's and sports federations - Vanoc expects to generate $232 million in revenue.

In the meantime, Denton said the public can whet its appetite for Olympic sports (or perhaps assuage disappointment at not getting tickets) by attending one of the slew of sports events Vanoc is hosting over this winter. Schedules can be found on Vanoc's website, www.vancouver2010.com.

depenner@vancouversun.com

Tri-City Guy
December 6th, 2008, 08:28 PM
I'm hating this waiting game until Wednesday...urgh. Nothing on my Credit Card which you'd think at least display a ticket purchase prior to the official announcement December 10th.

The only thing worse than getting no tickets, would be getting all my ticket request. My poor VISA is going to suffer a stroke if that happens.

DrT
December 7th, 2008, 04:46 PM
I have to wait a little longer here in the states for the results from CoSport, the people handling "foreigners"


CoSport has received a record number of requests during the 5-week period. CoSport will finalize the lottery and allocation process next week and commence sending the email confirmations to each Account Holder during the week of 15th December 2008.

Tri-City Guy
December 20th, 2008, 11:06 PM
I'm really lucky! I got opening and closing ceremony packages. I only requested single seat selection which I know makes me a big looser but then again I think that helped my odds. LOL

DrT
December 22nd, 2008, 04:39 AM
I'm really lucky! I got opening and closing ceremony packages. I only requested single seat selection which I know makes me a big looser but then again I think that helped my odds. LOL

Oh, your credit card is going to hurt big time, LOL.
Congrats!


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