Dear New Orleans Saints,
Dear New Orleans Saints,
On Thursday, March 18, I was a season ticket holder in Section 641, Row 42, of the Louisiana Superdome, the sacred home of the World Champion New Orleans Saints. On Friday, March 19, I was not.
I am not writing to protest the renovation of the Superdome or the placement of the new press box at the top of the Upper Terrace. Nor am I writing to bash the brave ticket account representatives who had the unenviable task of calling 1,200 stunned and hurt fans on Thursday and Friday. I understand these are necessary moves that, while painful to all of us whose game day communities have been removed, will allow the city to attract more Super Bowls and will allow the team to collect more revenue.
The current relocation process, as explained to me by a courteous account representative, puts us all at the top of the season ticket waiting list. So, through no fault of our own, we go from "World Champion New Orleans Saints season ticket holder" to "on the 60,000 person waiting list" for a chance to buy seats comparable to the ones that were previously ours. The current relocation process requires us to wait until early May, presumably after the first deadline for season ticket holders (whose seats were not removed) to make payment on their account. I was told we will not receive a season ticket invoice this week, as we are no longer season ticket holders. I am unclear on whether those invoices will give season ticket holders the traditional opportunity to request more seats or relocate their current seats before we are given a relocation offer.
So, the current relocation process seems to make 1,200 displaced Who Dats wait two months until we will receive phone calls, with a representative working individually to relocate each seat lost. As my account rep told me, there is no guarantee that our seats will be relocated for the 2010 season, a season in which our New Orleans Saints will play as reigning Super Bowl champions for the first time ever. There is no guarantee we’ll be offered a single game in the 2010 season.
But, if we are not relocated during the 2010 season, we will be back at the top of the waiting list for the 2011 season, where we will presumably have the opportunity to buy a seat because the Superdome will have 3,000 additional seats. It is possible, the account rep said, that our relocation offers will be for seats that are far more expensive than the ones that were taken from us, which ranged from $30 - $33 a ticket in 2009 and $40 - $43 a ticket in 2010. And any individual game tickets returned by opposing teams will be offered for purchase to the 1,200 displaced Who Dats still on the waiting list. So, in 2010 we’re looking at ticket options for which games? The Browns? The Cardinals? The Bucs?
What disturbs me most is that the World Champion New Orleans Saints have not shown the sort of respect and gratitude for these 1,200 displaced Who Dats that they demonstrated in placing a thank you card in a recent issue of the Times-Picayune. That card read, "World Champion Fans . . . The Saints Salute You. We’d like to thank our World Champion Fans for helping to make this season truly unforgettable. We couldn’t be the Super Bowl Champions without you." Reading that card a few Sundays ago, I was reminded of Jim Henderson’s call for the NFC Championship game: "It’s a great day to be a New Orleanian. It’s a great day to be a Saint." By comparison, yesterday’s phone conversation with the ticket office was a Garret Hartley kick to the groin.
Every section in the Superdome considers itself the "best section," "the most passionate section," "the loudest section," "the most loyal section," "the most colorful section." Every section will tell you it has built lifelong friendships in its seats; celebrated births; mourned deaths; and in 2006 and 2009, cherished special seasons. I’m biased, but I believe that this happens more easily in the Upper Terrace.
I know it happens in Section 641, which we call Café 641, where fans costume as Chef Who Dat, Denim & Diamonds, Ms. Shootz to Kill, The Entity, Hold-that-Line Cook, Adult Industry Chef, Dirty Dog, even Nacho Libre and Joe Dirt. We distribute satirical menus for every game that poke fun at the opposition: Dirty Bird Rice; Pants on the Ground Fumbalaya; Warmed-over Warner Schnitzel. We award golden spoon awards to the most spirited fan in our section each week. We apply eye-black to as many kids’ faces as parents will let us. We wave rubber chickens costumed as "The Real Housewives of Atlanta." We bring boxed Barbie Ken dolls: Tom Brady as "The New England Ken Doll" and Tony Romo as "Romo the Rodeo Clown." We make buttons that proclaim "Roofbanger" and distribute them hundreds at a time. We travel, as a group, to the airport to tell Our Saints, "thank you." We distribute "Roofbanger’s Creed" prayer cards and recite them in unison before kickoff: "We believe in the New Orleans Saints . . ." And we are gracious hosts to opposing fans (ask Arizona Cardinals running back Beanie Wells, whose fiancé sat in a Café 641 seat that has now been removed: she was offered drinks, food, and congratulations when Beanie scored). Most importantly, we support each other, our city, and Our New Orleans Saints.
I do not blame the New Orleans Saints for placing a press box at the top of the Upper Terrace. I do not blame the New Orleans Saints for breaking up one of the Superdome’s truly great sections and core group of fans. But, I am disappointed that our World Champion franchise:
• did not give these fans considerable advance notice,
• did not follow-up a phone conversation with a letter or e-mail that details the relocation process,
• did not develop a creative strategy to insure they will be in the Superdome when the Super Bowl banner drops,
• did not recognize that being a World Champion New Orleans Saints season ticket holder means more than having a physical seat to watch a football game; it’s a bond with one’s team and city.
The current relocation process puts these dedicated fans in limbo. We do not know when we’ll be contacted in May because we do not know when season ticket invoices are due. We do not know who, specifically, will contact us, and how that person will "work with us individually to relocate us." We do not know the process used to determine if an available seat is offered to us: Will we only be offered comparably priced seats? Will we be offered the first available seat regardless of location? Will we be priced out of the Superdome?
The World Champion New Orleans Saints know something about improvising. They did it after the levees broke in August 2005, and home games were played in Tiger Stadium. They did it in re-opening the Superdome, balancing a tribute to the stadium as a site of tragedy and rebirth. They did it after winning the Super Bowl, accommodating fans at the airport, in an unforgettable parade, and throughout Mardi Gras.
Will you not improvise now? Call an audible. Create a temporary solution for 2010:
• standing room only sections (we’re used to standing at the top of the Dome);
• bleachers placed on the field separated by section;
• fewer seats offered to the opposition.
We all recognize that this is not an easy problem to solve. We all appreciate the respectful conversations we’ve had with the ticket office. And we all know that a World Champion organization who is so connected to its fans and their culture can find a way to accommodate us now.
Thank you in advance for re-considering the process you use to relocate us, providing more specific details about that process, and committing to finding a seat for all of us when the Super Bowl banner drops on September 9.
Sincerely,
Ross Louis, New Orleans
Section 641, Row 42, Seats 9-10
This FanPost was written by a reader and member of Canal Street Chronicles. It does not necessarily reflect the views of CSC and its staff or editors.
14 recs |
25 comments
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Comments
sad story
i love to tell my friends that sit in the lower sections what they’re missing in the terrace. the “roofbangers” truly are some of the most dedicated psycho fans ever. hopefully the ticket office will get yall back in the dome soon.
DBMC sec 620
Yes, Sean Payton is the new Zorro. He leads wild adventures, quaffs the finest wines, embarrasses his enemies and leaves a extravagant calling card in his wake. Try as you might to stop him, but he's always one sip ahead.
by DrewBreesManCrush on Mar 21, 2010 9:50 PM CDT reply actions
what is happening to these folks is inexcusable
I hope the revolt gets the big man’s attention and then gets results…
"I have all of the love in the world for Darren Sharper. I just don't have all the money in the world for Darren Sharper." Mickey Loomis
Ha! Something like that...
"I have all of the love in the world for Darren Sharper. I just don't have all the money in the world for Darren Sharper." Mickey Loomis
There are hundreds of tickets on Craigslist and TicketExchange for every game. Suck it up and buy them individually for a year or two. I’m sure the Saints will have a seven-to-nine win season in the not-to-distant future, thousands of bandwagoners will get disgusted, drop their season tickets and you’ll have your foot back in the door. You can still tailgate and whatnot with your buddies before the game, you just won’t be sitting with around them. I realize it’s not the same, but suppose you were offered a season ticket in a specific section and everyone around you gave their tickets to friends and relatives every other game. Let a little disinterest set in and that’s exactly what you get, wherever you’re sitting. All I’m saying is, don’t let it get to you. The people in your immediate vicinity are a superficial entertainment. The real reason you’re paying your hard earned money to go to games is for the excitement of the (collective) crowd and to cheer on your Black & Gold. If push came to shove, I’d be ok doing that from any nook or cranny in the house. The only thing that truly matters is that you’re in the house and that opportunity is not being taken from you.
"I was not on the boat in question." -Darren Sharper
by coldpizza on Mar 22, 2010 2:08 AM CDT reply actions 1 recs
Let the man be pissed!
Especially since you “escaped the carnage” (per your recent post).
Fat, dumb, and happy. Hell, two out of three ain't bad!
I Want To Die In My Sleep Like My Grandpa – Not Screaming and Yelling Like His Passengers.
by Just 'Nother Day on Mar 22, 2010 4:51 AM CDT up reply actions
Just telling him how I would have made due, had I not.
"I was not on the boat in question." -Darren Sharper
Thanks for suggestion . . .
. . . I don’t think anyone is just complaining and leaving it at that. When it’s time to make do, we’ll make do: stubhub, beg from friends, tailgate with same people, etc. The issue, though, is that the process isn’t being communicated clearly — and in some cases, at all.
And, this might be rare (though I doubt it in the Upper Terrace), but our desire to be in the Superdome to watch the Saints play is synonymous with our desire to experience that with our “family” we’ve created and nurtured over the past years. We’re already conceding that we won’t be able to maintain our “crazy culture” in our “own section.” Now, we just want to be in the Dome. Cuz we don’t miss games, and for many, paying even 2x face value is not financially viable.
Definitely appreciate your brainstorming solutions, though I wouldn’t wish the “dreaded call” on anyone.
I think what they should have done is, take all the first year season ticket holders in those affected sections and 76ed them. Then, come back and see how many remained. Move a section out in either direction and do the same thing, then relocate the remaining people into those seats by longest tenured. Move another section out in either direction and continue to purge/relocate. If it got to the point where people in the affected areas were turning down seats based on how far they were removed from the 50 yd line, either start over again by eliminating the two year season ticket holders in the affected areas, or tactfully tell the whiners to take a hike.
"I was not on the boat in question." -Darren Sharper
Actually, the three sections directly across the Superdome from the ones affected should be the first to be purged, being that they’re the most comparable seats. Then, outward from there in all four directions. I wouldn’t ripple it into sections below the terrace, though. Odds are they wouldn’t be able to afford the lower seats, anyway.
Speaking of which, why is a press box even needed in this day and age? I can see having a small official’s booth and some sort of centralized broadcast control center … but writers, sportscasters, play-by-play … all of that could (and probably should) be handled off-site. They’re only describing what we see on television anyway. Let them watch it on television.
"I was not on the boat in question." -Darren Sharper
It’s a shame that this is going down this way. Get your friends to sign the letter above and send it to whomever’s address you can find. I’m not talking about just people involved with the seating situation. I mean everyone involved in the organization in any way, including local politicians. You’d be surprised at how effective making yourself a pain in the ass can be. I had a seating issue solved when I went to the Saints/Falcons at the Georgia Dome a few years back after someone I contacted at the Atlanta Bureau of Tourism decide to champion my cause.
Rec'd your letter.
I hope something is worked out for all who are being displaced. I have a great seat every week in front of my tv, but if I lived in LA, I’d want to be there live and in person. Best of luck to you!
"It's better to burn out than fade away."
I rec'd it
hope something gets worked out for you. You are definetly handling it better that i think i would have if i was a season holder and if it happened to me. If I was in LA, i’d want to be there too. Whenever I go home to Ms then I usually try to go to a game. Best of luck to you.
Superbowl bound!!!...I know! do you?! Go Saints!!
keep your chin up
I am sure it will be fixed for all of you and you will be in the dome sept 9th.
standing room only
at least to watch the banner drop that is the least the front office can do for you. Like you said, you stand for most of the game anyway.
by Saintsfan75 on Mar 23, 2010 5:23 AM CDT reply actions 1 recs
Good luck with the waiting list.
I have been on it for the past three years and still no offers for seats.
I've tasted the Kool-Aid and its damn good!

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