That seems low compared to the number (in the 70âs?) that was bandied about that each Limerick Senior Club got. Are the tickets going somewhere else in the county or just more clubs or whatâs at play?
That being said - answering my own question with a quote from the article
"âThe formula weâve used is the tried and trusted one, going by (club) affiliation - 24 tickets for senior, 20 for intermediate and 14 for junior. In some cases that doubles up according to the affiliation - a dual senior club would get 48 tickets - but the fundamental difference is that we also have premium ticket holders, season ticket holders and so on
The bit in bold seems fairly vague and doing a lot of heavy lifting
So say 259 clubs in Cork - average of 20 per club (allowing for junior/senior mix) and you have 5,180. Thatâs less than half of the Cork allocation. Whatâs the premium tickets he referenced - surely thatâs separate to the allocation and direct with Croke Park itself.
the premium tickets were all cancelled for the year and as far as I know if youâd four premium tickets youâd the option to buy two. Ten year ones that is.
Thatâs for Croke Park. I think there is a premium level in PUC and the holders of those tickets might have a right to buy an all Ireland ticket as part of the package.
The senior clubs get far more tickets than intermediate/junior do they? Any clubs relegated recently in Cork or Limerick will be raging. How many tickets are available in Gearoid Hegartyâs club for instance?