Fueled in part by a 9.1-percent drop in Tennessee, NFL attendance drops by 0.8 percent, to an average per game of 69,055.

11 comments
  1. Almost like moving to 17 games makes each game less important, more injuries and load management for the best players, more teams in the playoffs make the stakes less per game, and less bye weeks to reward the best teams makes seeding irrelevant.

    When the games are getting less important, less people are willing to pay hundreds for a seat. Let alone when the team is 3-14

  2. I would love to see how much opposing fan attendance declined this season. That has been the Titans bread and butter for a few years now.

  3. More than half the time I went to games in past years, the juice wasn’t worth the squeeze.

    If you get 70-80% of the experience at home or at the local sports bar? The leftover isn’t worth hundreds of dollars and a day of your life.

    I really can only think of a single home Titans game I went to that I can in retrospect say;
    “Man I’m glad I was there” and that was 2000 vs the Ravens.

    Including the 2008-09 Ravens home playoff game. Could have skipped that one.

    Post Derrick Henry, the Titans certainly have not been a “must see live” experience. You end up sitting there twiddling your thumbs during the thousand commercial breaks/timeouts. And if the game isn’t good, it’s really bad.

  4. NFL tickets are so overpriced. Hope attendance keeps dropping and they make the tickets more affordable.

  5. Have to make the stadium experience a lot better to compete with watching from home. That starts with improving the product on the field, of course, but there is a lot of meat on the bone

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