Smith May Fuel Ticket Revival at U
Gopher men’s basketball season ticket
sales to the general public, faculty and students will show a small
increase for the coming season. A marketing and ticket spokesman
reported earlier this week that the public/faculty sale is near 10,000
(about 9,000 last season) and a student sale of 2,000 (up from 1,400) is
expected.
Particularly sales to the public may
increase between now and early November when Tubby Smith’s team plays
its exhibition games against Minnesota State and Southwest Minnesota
State. A total season ticket count of 12,000 or more creates the
potential through single game sales for selling out some or all of the
Big Ten Conference games that begin January. It’s possible
all nine home conference games will be sold out in Williams Arena (capacity 14,625)
before January 1.
Smith’s arrival last March as the new
Gopher coach is responsible for the mild upturn in interest. Years ago
Gopher basketball, fueled by talented players and an electric atmosphere
in Williams Arena, was considered by many sports fans to be the “best
show in town.” However, passion has been declining for 10
years, damaged by the Clem Haskins scandal and devastated by the
failed Dan Monson coaching era.
A rightfully skeptical public has an eye
toward Smith but isn’t necessarily ready to buy tickets in Williams
Arena (please, don’t call it the "Barn"). Last Friday an
event branded
“Tubby’s Tipoff” was a free invitation to have an early look at Smith
and the Gophers. While there were reports of 5,000 people attending, a
Williams Arena regular for years reported about 2,500 to Sports
Headliners.
Smith, a genuinely nice man, was shaking
hands with people and even did a celebratory dance, according to my
source. He didn’t predict a championship but said the coming season will
offer fun.
If Smith needed any reminders after
spending several months in Minnesota that he no longer was coaching at
basketball-crazy Kentucky, he certainly could see as much last Friday
night. On the same evening in Lexington a near capacity crowd of
more than 23,000 attended a Wildcat practice and promotion similar to Tubby’s, according to
reports. The folks in Kentucky,
who expect nothing less than national championships, are excited about
new coach Billy Gillispie.
Smith’s impressive resume includes being
named national Coach of the Year three times. His only national
championship, though, was in 1998 and in three of the last four years
Kentucky was eliminated in the second round of the NCAA
tournament.
Answers as to how Smith, 56, will do here
are coming soon. By next spring we’ll have a report card on how
effectively he coached pretty much the same bunch of Gophers who lost
their last nine games last season, finished 9-22 overall, 3-13 in the
Big Ten Conference (10th place). A lot more will be known,
too, about how effective Smith and his staff recruit, with the class of
2008-2009 expected to include high school and junior college players.
This may never be Kentucky (seven NCAA
titles) but a lot of down trodden Gopher basketball fans just hope it
can be like the 1970s and 1980s when Minnesota was winning conference
basketball championships and entertaining with some of the better
players in the country.