In the past, we bought tickets to see the World Cup Cricket matches in 3 different countries. I want to share my experience. I learned a lesson also that will be provided at the end of this post.
We bought 3 tickets to watch a double header at the Oval in England, 8 tickets to watch a match in Chennai, India, and 3 tickets to watch a match in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Because of a scheduling problem, we were unable to attend the Colombo match. I wrote to the organization from where I bought the tickets and explained my problem. They immediately refunded my money.
Oval Match in England.
It was a T20 double header. First match was South Africa vs West Indies. Second match was Pakistan vs New Zealand. We had reserved seats with row and seat numbers. We were a little bit late. By the time we reached our reserved seats, national anthems of both South Africa and West Indies had already sang. (or is it sung? Since I did not go to Harvard, I do not know which one is correct.)
The whole stadium was jam packed. Our seats were not occupied by anyone else. It was in a very comfortable place. It was next to where Pakistani players sat. One usher came and said that this place is for Pakistani supporters and, if we want, he could give us an alternative better seat to watch. We thanked him and said “no thanks” and remained in our seats for the entire double header. We even shook hands with Shahid Afridi
Both matches were very enjoyable. The more beer consumed the more enjoyable the matches were. HeHeHe.
Match in Chennai.
It was an ODI. India vs West Indies. We bought 8 tickets, each at a very high price. We got the reserved tickets with row and seat numbers. We went to the stadium one hour before the start of the match. Surprise. Surprise. The whole stadium was jam packed. Our 8 reserved seats were occupied by unknown people. We told them these are our seats and they just ignored us. We called this to the attention of the ushers and the police security. They both said: Koottam jasthiya irukku sir. Konjam adjust pannikinga sir. Enga kaaliya seat irukko anga utkarunga sir. (Today too much crowd sir. Please have some adjustment sir. Please sit where you can find an empty seat sir.)
There was nothing we could do. Finally, we sat in the Bob Uecker seat*. There was no organized place to sell soft drinks and water. They were at random places and spectators were mobbing those sellers.
So the lesson is never ever watch a world cup cricket match in person in India. Better to watch them in TV.
* Bob Uecker was a professional baseball player in USA. He acted in a Miller Lite Bob Uecker commercial. In that commercial he boasted he got a special ticket to watch a baseball game and finally ended up sitting in the last seat at the top most upper deck. The ad has become so famous that if people get a “not so good” seat at sporting events, they call it a Bob Uecker seat.
Sad to note your experience at Chennai. If the organisers of any event cannot ensure seats sold in advance with specific row and seat numbers are kept vacant, they should be content with selling unreserved seats as in a few second class railway compartments on a first come first served basis.
ReplyDeleteWhy promise more than what one can perform?
Thanks for your comments Mr. KP. I do not know much about India. In other parts of the world, all sporting events are managed by “Sports Event Management” companies. They make sure spectators are seated in their allotted seats (in addition to other responsibilities).
DeleteSweet and sour memories recalled. Sweet part - We enjoyed the match with your company (you, akka,Raja) and I was with my daughter and brother kanna 8 tickets bought by you well ahead of time, saw Dhoni Suresh Raina in action. Sour part - buying soft drinks and water. By the way, it should have been "National Anthems had already been sung". You are right in your corrected version within brackets. I studied only in Madras University ha ha
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Gowri. My sour part is some guys occupied our seats and we had to sit in the Bob Uecker seat. You forgot to mention this.
DeleteYes. That is the saddest part. I forgot to mention that since my comment was going a little lengthy
ReplyDeleteThanks Gowri
DeleteOh wow... interesting.... but super good advice.... I liked the way the match in England was more organized and you got the exact seats u reserved even if you were late...
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Dee.
DeleteSince I don't watch cricket even in the TV, I don't have to worry about such things :)
ReplyDeleteI remember going to a stadium in chennai when I was very young. At that time they just sold the tickets for entry to each stand, there were no seat numbers alloted to anyone.
In trains, movie halls. etc. where there are seat nos allocated, I have never faced this issue in Chennai. Even if the seats are occupied they go elsewhere once we show them our tickets.
Thanks for your comments Rajesh. Trains and movie halls are different from sports crowd. They are a rowdy bunch in India.
DeleteFrankly, I am not surprised by the sour experience you had. The organizers should have been more professional.
ReplyDeleteI would have enjoyed it if I was there. Anyway, you could have argued with the guys to give your 8 seats. I remember watching with you India vs West Indies in 2002. We didn't have any problem.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Coach. Argue with a bunch of drunk rowdies? No. I still remember going to watch the cricket match with you in 2002. Yes, we did not have any problem then.
DeleteHaving watched two ODIs in India (2002 and 2011), my recollections are that having contacts helps cushion the "surprises." It shouldn't be that way -- maybe it is use of contacts that leads to all this.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Jagan. You are right. Having "contacts" in India does help for sure.
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