Hey why not go to the Subway Series on the cheap..here’s how!

Our partners at TiqIq have some deals…it’s nice out, why not head on up to Fake New Yankee Stadium and see what happens when pitchers don’t bat and even Daniel Murphy hits home runs.

Hook it up Mets Police!

  • 1900+ tickets starting at $34.
  • 15+ instant delivery eTickets ranging from $44-$283.
  • 400+ tickets available for less than $55, including some in TiqZone Field OF for 50% below face price.
  • Grandstand seats behind the dugouts or home plate start at $47.
  • 150+ Bleacher Seats available for less than $60. These tickets range from 23%-32% below market average.
  • 70+ seats available on the main level behind the dugouts for $57-$90. These seats range from 17%-31% below face price.
  • Prices for 100-Level Field seats start @ $97 (22% below face price).

Buy tickets.

 

and looking ahead to Saturday

  • 3200+ tickets starting at $25
  • 140 instant delivery eTIckets ranging from $57-$95.
  • 90+ tickets available for $50 or less.
  • Bleacher seats start @ $50 and there are over 300 available for less than $70, some for up to 33% below market value .
  • Grandstand seats behind the dugouts or home plate start at $40 and there are 100+ available for less than $60.
  • Main level behind the dugouts start at $70 (22% below face value.
  • Prices for Field level seats start @ $74 (18% below face price) in the outfield and $111 (11% below face price) behind the dugouts.

and Sunday

  • 2000+ tickets starting at $40
  • 15+ instant delivery eTickets available from $47-$212.
  • 150+ tickets available for less than $60.
  • Tickets in the Bleachers start at $53 and there are over 140 available for less than $70. These seats range from 15%-34% below market average.
  • Grandstand seats start at $47 (36% below market average) behind the dugouts and $56 (30% below market avg) behind home plate.
  • Main Level seats start at $55 (43% below market avg) and there are 60+ available for less than $100.
  • Prices for Field level seats start @ $74 (18% below face price).

New Addition to my Mets Stuff at Precinct 41

Only a few more hours till El Capitan returns, then I can go back to relaxing and recharging my batteries till his next trip which I am sure will be Saturday. Let me bogart the last few hours with some of my stuff.

New Edition to Precinct 41. A bat signed by David Wright. That matches my signed Wright baseball and batting helmet. Is a signed glove in the future? Who knows.

 

Counterpoint: so some folks want Nohan tickets

Why do you care? So the Mets make some money and some folks get a weird souvenir. If you were there, great. If you want to pretend you were there, great. If you want to frame it and stick it away for 20 years and then send me a pic for when I do “2010’s week” for the 2034 All Star Break then great.

Media Goon mentioned that Leigh in tickets is a straight dealer. I also find that to be true.

Now where’s my flight home?

Randy from Read The Apple Thoughts on Mets No hit Ticket Reprints

This is an excerpt from my buddy Randy over at Read The Apple. I knew someone ideas and feelings about the Mets Ticket reprints would start to trickle it. For a rare instance Randy is not doing something absurdly funny or just insane but insightful and thoughtful. Wow. Now to think about it, WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT DID YOU DO WITH THE REAL RANDY!!!!!!! Anyway read some of the fake Randy’s thoughts that I grabbed from his site.

I started thinking. What about people who bought walk up tickets or ordered them individually from Mets.com. They witnessed history the same as I did and now someone else can walk around with their seat numbers on a ticket stub? It doesn’t make sense.

The attendance for the game was 27,069. Citi Field holds 41,922. I did the math and that means there were 563 unused tickets. Then I had someone better at math do the math and they correctly pointed out that it was actually 14,853 unused seats. Why can’t the Mets just sell those stubs?

Which brings up another thought. The great thing about being the Mets is that they are allowed to slap the name Mets on anything and sell it for a premium. So why not just make a special commemorative ticket and sell that. You could put either a bogus or vacant seat location on it. It would be no more a “real” ticket than a reprinted ticket.

What if you had those horrible e-tickets to the game? The Mets email is unclear as to whether your 50 bucks gets you the ticket for the actual seat you had or if you just get “best available seat in that location.” For that, why wouldn’t I just go here and get a fully framed one with my correct seat for less than $50? Seems like a better deal than what the Mets are offering doesn’t it?

Also to prove that he understands trying to make money in a capitalistic system he writes:

The Mets are in the business of making money and with Nohan stubs breaking records online it would be foolish to completely ignore the secondary market. If someone wants to pay for what is essentially a fake ticket, charge them whatever you want. Just don’t sell someone an exact copy of mine or anyone else’s seat.

Good work fake Randy…Read the rest of his post here.