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'Slam-dunk sellout'
Jordan has box-office phones ringing off the hook
Posted: Wednesday September 26, 2001 5:46 PM Updated: Thursday September 27, 2001 6:54
PM
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The Wizards have sold out of 10- and 20-game ticket packages.
AP |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Suddenly, everyone wants to see the Washington
Wizards.
Typically one of the NBA's weakest draws, the Wizards have become one
of the biggest attractions around the league since Michael Jordan
announced he was coming out of retirement to play for Washington.
Phone lines were ringing off the hook in Seattle and Boston. Interest
in Bulls' season tickets peaked as fans wondered what it would be like to
see the man who won six championship rings in Chicago play in a uniform
that wasn't red and black.
And at Jordan's new home court, MCI Center in Washington, people who
thought they would never pay money to watch the Wizards play lined up for
seats.
"Did you think I was going to buy tickets to see [Kwame] Brown and
[Richard] Hamilton play? No way," lawyer I. Hope Umana said Wednesday
about Jordan's new teammates before paying more than $2,000 for two season
tickets.
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| "I just want anything that will get
me into the building," Umana said.
The ticket frenzy began soon after Jordan made his comeback official in
a statement Tuesday.
Citing his love for the game, Jordan sold his ownership stake in the
team and relinquished his position as president of basketball operations
to resume his playing career.
Individual game tickets for the Wizards' two visits to Boston have sold
out. The Celtics limited the number of tickets people could buy to see the
Wizards to four.
Mike Golub, senior vice president of business operations for the Memphis
Grizzlies, said the phones had been ringing since Jordan's
announcement.
"When the news broke, the business probably tripled, and today is our
best sales day," Golub said. "This will be a slam-dunk sellout."
The Denver
Nuggets added their March 20 game against the Wizards to 10-game
ticket packages. Paul Andrews, vice president of ticket sales, said he
expected the game to be sold out by the time regular ticket sales open
Oct. 6.
"That is the most high-demand game by far, and every team will tell you
that," Andrews said.
At the MCI Center ticket counter, there was a brief wait at a booth
that sold only season tickets. Team spokesman Matt Williams said that was
because most season-ticket sales were done over the phone.
"This morning was the decision-maker," Mike Sami said about making up
his mind to buy tickets. He paid $3,700 for two tickets to see all 41 home
games.
"Jordan is going to do the team good, and he's going to do the city
good," Sami said.
Williams said as of Wednesday, 1,000 new season-ticket packages were
sold since Jordan's announcement. That boosts the number of total season
ticket plans sold to 13,000, surpassing the previous high of 12,000 set in
1997, when MCI Center opened.
Ten- and 20-game ticket plans for the Wizards already were sold out.
The team did not have an estimate of how many new season-ticket packages
were sold.
In addition, the Wizards set aside 1,500 seats to be sold individually,
without a season-ticket plan. Those tickets go on sale Monday.
"Certainly, we've been getting more calls about tickets this early in
the season than we've ever had," Williams said.
In Chicago, fans marked Jan. 19 and March 1 on their calendars. Those
are the days when Jordan and the Wizards visit the Bulls.
"In the market where he played and won six championships, they really
want to see him," team spokeswoman Sebrina Brewster said.
Brewster said individual game tickets don't go on sale until Oct. 6,
and when they do there will be only about 1,000 of them.
She said the team is, however, selling season-ticket packages and four
different 11-game packages, two of which include one of the two games the
Wizards play in Chicago.
Even people like Scott Baird, a hockey fan who up to now had little
interest in basketball, pondered whether to buy Wizards tickets. Baird was
waiting in line at MCI Center for tickets for the Washington Capitals.
"Yeah, I'd see him play. Michael is Michael, he's such a special
athlete," Baird said. "He can do whatever he wants."
Copyright 2001 Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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