KU hikes men’s basketball ticket prices

By Chuck Woodling     May 8, 2000

Single-game reserved seat tickets to Kansas University men’s basketball games — if you’re lucky enough to obtain one — will cost $5 more for the 2000-2001 season.

At its May meeting on Friday, the Kansas University Athletics Corp. board voted to hike ticket prices from $25 — already the highest in the Big 12 Conference — to $30.

That translates into a $480 season ticket.

The boost, which passed by a 12-5 vote, will raise an additional $781,000 and cover a projected shortfall in the FY 2000-2001 budget.

“We’re looking at a 2 1/2-percent increase in salaries, an 8.85-percent increase in scholarship costs because of tuition, and housing costs are up,” KU athletics director Bob Frederick said.

Among the five dissenters was Allen Ford, a professor of business and chair of the board finance committee.

“I think raising ticket prices that are already the highest in the league will have a negative effect on campus,” Ford said.

Echoed board member Wayne Osness, a professor of health, sport and exercise: “If we’re at the top of the Big 12 now, we need to be careful. I feel the same way about tuition hikes.”

However, Dana Anderson, an alumni board member from Los Angeles, Calif., stressed the need for additional revenue.

“The money isn’t needed for basketball,” Anderson said. “It’s needed for Olympics sports and the gender-equity program. It would be wrong to add it to football tickets at this point. I think it’s the only viable alternative, as painful as it is.”

Jack Cleavenger, an alumni member from Kansas City, Mo., suggested the next step might be to make patrons contribute more to the Williams Fund for quality seats.

“Every year the University of Kentucky changes its seating based on contributions,” Cleavinger said. “And Arizona has a contributor price on every seat. Even the worst seat requires a contribution.”

Kansas makes no price distinctions. Reserved seats in the last row of the upper level cost the same as reserved seats in the first row of the lower level.

In other business Friday:

  • John Ferraro, who represents the KU Medical Center on the board, was elected new chair. Diana Carlin, named dean of KU’s graduate school last week, is the new vice chair. Jessica Bankston, a student member, is the new secretary.
  • Susan Williams, a petroleum engineering prof, and Ted Wilson, a history prof, were added to the board to fill the expired terms of Ford and Bill Tuttle, a history prof.
  • Susan Wachter, the department’s chief financial officer, reported Williams Fund contributions had reached $3,775,000. That’s about $100,000 more than last year at the same time.
  • Frederick announced he has chosen St. Louis-based Astro-Play over Field Turf for the new playing surface at Memorial Stadium. “Astro-Play made an unbelievable offer because they wanted to get into a Division One school,” Frederick said. “Our hope is to have it in by July 4.” KU will pay $345,000 for the grass-like artificial surface that looks so real that, Frederick said, “You don’t know it isn’t grass until you grab it and your hand doesn’t turn green.”
  • The board rejected a motion by Ford to issue a resolution opposing the concept of a 12th football game. The NCAA has approved a 12th game for the 2002 and 2003 seasons, and Kansas has already scheduled Northwestern. Ford contends a 12th game is “not student-athlete friendly.”
  • The board heard that KU will play two NCAA Div. II in-state schools in men’s basketball next season. The two schools are Washburn and Emporia State. The E-State game will replace one of the preseason exhibition games.
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