Today in 1973 | Page 2 | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Today in 1973

Obviously things were cheaper back then but that might be a part of why the ticket sales were so high in 1973. Plus as Junc said, the at-home experience today didn't exist back then so that made it better for fans to go to the actual games.

I remember when I was in my early teens and I had to call the Washington Post Sports Hotline just to get the score of the game. It updated like every 15 minutes. Talk about awful.
 
Also note that this was right before the NFL changed the blackout rule....before this, home game were blacked out even if they were sold out.
 
"Downhill"? In South Florida? Lol, is there such a thing? :chuckle:

I thought someone might comment on that. It actually was strangely downhill, in fact quite a bit downhill. Other Orange Bowl regulars might remember that. The street leading toward the stadium on the south side, aiming more or less smack toward the press box, was not level. In fact the apartment complexes on the east side of that street were at such an apparent slant that I remember the terrain taking me at an increased pace as I passed the guys leaning on their balconies.

Then it was uphill on the way back but you didn't care because you had just witnessed another victory.

We never got season tickets for the Dolphins once they relocated to the Robbie Bowl. It was never a consideration, considering the location and caliber of that venue. Patchwork is not going to fool many people.

Regarding junc's comment, yes the Orange Bowl held roughly 80,000 in its heyday. The base bowl seated maybe 76,000 then 4000 auxiliary seats were added to the east end zone due to ticket demand during the early '70s glory years. Those seats remained for many years. It was funny to wander into them during Canes games on Friday night with sparse crowds. Virtually nobody was in those seats. When the Canes played the Irish my friends and I used to bring anti-Notre Dame banners and hold them up under the scoreboard, which was just above the level of the top row of the auxiliary stands. The Notre Dame highlight show on Sundays always showed a glimpse of the scoreboard after Notre Dame scored. But during those early '70s games they couldn't show the Orange Bowl scoreboard. Not once. We always had a banner up there that said, "Notre Dame s***s" and similar. You can imagine. We always laughed that we were impacting the highlight program, which was very famous during that era.

Those 4000 seats were removed later in the '70s once the glory era ended and ticket demand wasn't as high.
 
I actually like Joe Robbie, I only went there once but it reminded me of our old Stadium which was perfect for football(except for the name and color of the seats of course). Joe Robbie has a little more room due top baseball but it can be a great football stadium.

---------- Post added at 09:29 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:28 AM ----------

Hd plus replays and redZone can't be beat.

I still love going to games, I love being a part of the atmosphere, being able to watch parts of the field I want to watch. it's getting harder and harder as my kids are growing up but I will keep going as long as I can.
 
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