OR you might say that this is evidence that Leafs fans are morons who
continually go to games when the product on the ice is shite.
Unlike the Habs fans who voice their displeasure by not buying tickets.
"ben" <jbrontey RemoveThis @yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:c48ed75e-2cda-4339-9276-9adea3ed3d3c@k13g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
On Jul 18, 9:37 pm, Vidar Andersen <vidaa... RemoveThis @online.no> wrote:
> On Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:08:29 -0700 (PDT), Marc-NS
>
> <marcmelan... RemoveThis @hotmail.com> wrote:
> >Hi,
>
> >I was wondering when single game tickets go on sale and what is the
> >best means to get some? Is there some kind of Maple Leaf club you can
> >jopin to get an early shot at tickets?
>
> >Thanks,
>
> >Marc
>
> Hi
>
> I'm a Montreal fan living in Europe and I bought hockey tickets online
> the day they released the single game tickets which is usually in the
> middle of september. I used the sitewww.admission.comwhich is a
> ticketmaster company. The site was obviously busy that day, but I
> managed to get the seats I wanted (next to the camera man) for all the
> games I could see the 10 days I was planning to be in Montreal. Expect
> the rinkside seats and the cheapest seats to go first. If you are
> willing to spend an hour or so online at the moment they open for
> business you should be able to get your tickets.
>
> Vidar
Getting tickets to a Habs game is much easier and cheaper than getting
tickets to a Leafs game. You can't even compare the two. I lived in
Montreal for about 10 years while I was in university and it was a
joke. The first game I went to was actually Roy's last game in
Montreal against Detroit at the Forum -- $12 from a scalper. Even
getting playoff tickets was easy. Back before Theodore was on the
propecia when Montreal had a modest playoff run I saw a few games just
buying tickets off the scalpers basically at the sticker price.
This of course is evidence highlighting how much more the Leafs' fans
love and support their team.
>> Stay informed about: Tickets on sale date