Izgleda da su prodali, sad se ceka na Vikingse:
The Minnesota Vikings were granted a
final 24-hour extension by the National Football League to sell
the remaining tickets for their playoff game this weekend
against the Philadelphia Eagles.
The NFL had given the Vikings, as well as the Arizona
Cardinals, until 4:30 p.m. New York time to sell out their game
or risk a blackout on local television. The league extended the
deadline after Minnesota still had 3,100 unsold seats, the team
said in a news release.
The Cardinals announced in their own release that their
playoff game against the Atlanta Falcons is sold out. The league
sets time limits that require teams to sell all tickets in
advance of games to allow them to be televised locally.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has said that the U.S.’s
most-watched television sport isn’t immune from the economic
slump. The league said it’s cutting playoff ticket prices in
response to an economy that’s been in a recession since the end
of 2007.
The Cardinals were successful selling the 3,700 tickets
that they said yesterday were left. The Vikings said yesterday
they had 8,000 seats unsold.
Enough tickets were sold in San Diego to avoid a television
blackout of tomorrow’s wild-card game between the Chargers and
Indianapolis Colts, the team said on Dec. 31.
The Dolphins said that their game against the Baltimore
Ravens the following day is sold out. It marked the first time
since Miami played host to the Buffalo Bills in the American
Football Conference championship game on Jan. 17, 1993 that all
general seating tickets for a home playoff game were sold on the
first day.
“Kam hit this tight end SO HARD, I swear I saw that TE’s soul leave Qwest Field right on that 35 yard line.”