Trust Chair E&S Column

This week Trust Chair, Daniel Warren wrote a column for the Express and Star about the ticket price increases imposed by the club.

Excerpts from Daniel’s column:

It’s been more than 10 years since a long gold and black banner was first draped across the Stan Cullis stand. It marked the start of a campaign that began in the third tier of English football, following two successive relegations.

The banner, which read “This is our love and it knows no division” (thank you Toaster), reflected the feelings of many Wolves fans as they readied themselves for a season playing the likes of Carlisle, Rotherham and Stevenage.

They didn’t care who the games were against. Molineux was their home and they would be there to roar on their team. And there they were. That season, Wolves’ average attendance was almost 21,000, the highest in the division and higher than many of the clubs in the Championship that year.

Yet this week, that loyalty and the loyalty that Wolves fans have shown in the ups and downs since, is being sorely tested.

The price rises the club slipped out last Thursday (no announcements were made, telling you all you need to know) have created an anger among fans that I haven’t seen since Wolves tumbled down to League One back in 2013.

Let’s be clear here – the price increases (which appear to start at around 18 per cent and go north from there) are exploitative and unnecessary’’

When we polled supporters, many of whom find themselves in the teeth of a cost-of-living crisis, most wanted a price freeze. Performances in the last third of the season cemented that idea for many.

We warned the club that above-inflation increases would drive many away and create bad blood among those who felt they had no option but to pay. But they didn’t listen. No wonder there is anger.

Some have suggested that if Wolves need to do a better job at balancing the books they should look a little closer to home for the £2-3m the increases will raise.

The club has spent more than £13million on agents’ fees this season, even though signings have been thin on the ground.

Of the seven costliest players still with the club, four are out on loan.

Julen Lopetegui, who resigned after he felt that the goalposts were moved on him once too often by the club’s officials, almost certainly didn’t pay for his own bus fare out of Compton.

For many fans, it feels like they are now being asked to bear the costs of others’ mistakes. It feels that their loyalty – unshakeable and unquestionable until now – is being exploited by people who don’t have the first idea what the club means to the people of this city.

Added to the increased cost are inconvenient kick-off times set by TV broadcasters, VAR and a complete lack of investment in an increasingly tatty-looking Molineux – with some stands no longer fit for purpose.

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Trust statement - Ticket Pricing

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Ticket pricing update