There is an underlying problem here the pundits are trying to avoid. We've been discussing this on another board and we've come to the conclusion that we are finally at the tipping point. Not only is this game still available, but Bama had a surplus of tickets left to the crap OOC games and Golden Flake bought the lot of them and is selling them for roughly half face value. College football has finally started pricing it's fans out of the stadium and it's going to get worse. Attendance has peaked and is starting to slide in the wrong direction. AD's, presidents, and coaches better recognize it and deal with it before it snowballs. And don't look to the media titans for help, they are your worst enemy in this struggle. Where do you think ESPN wants your fanny? In Bryant-Denney attending the game or at home watching their gazillion commercials for their sponsors? They have started killing the golden goose and they'd better wake up and realize it. This game isn't the problem, it's merely a symptom of the greater problem.
I don't know that anyone is trying to avoid larger economic issues, just talking football. There are notable examples of entertainment and sporting venues overreaching and losing their core base. NASCAR did it some time ago. Since there are tickets available at Rolltide.com for Middle Tennessee State - $35.00; Louisiana-Monroe - $35.00; Arkansas - $85.00; and Charleston Southern - $35.00, I don't think Golden Flake bought them all.
I agree Jerry World was built to extract the maximum dollars from the user, and I do think they've over-reached. There's a reason they pay the teams $4 or $5MM to appear.
From an economic or cultural perspective, it's tough to make an objective call of a tipping point. We've had a six year recession with a recovery that's occurred as defined by economic output, but certainly not employment and wage growth. During this time, and before then, unsuccessful programs had attendance problems even at dirt cheap prices. The proliferation of "bowl-type" neutral site games has reduced their uniqueness and attractiveness. Fans are, and should be, less willing to spend premium prices for kickoff games as opposed to traditional bowl and championship games.
RTR,
Tim