Could Teams Still Turn a Profit If Concessions Were Cheaper?

My stint as a stadium vendor says the answer is yes

John W. Miller
Heated

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Left, Mike McGinnis for Getty Images, right, Pastor Scott for Getty Images

This is peak sports season in the United States, when summer meets fall and baseball, basketball, football, and hockey are all alive at the same time.

From tipoff to buzzer and spring training to World Series, one of the only certainties in all sports is this: If you want to spoil a lovely night out watching the home team, go buy your family some burgers and sodas.

The $105 tab will be a friendly reminder that, for all their romance and charm, pro sports are a business. You’re sitting in their seats and they want your money.

But does eating and drinking at ballgames really have to be so expensive?

I became fascinated with the economics of food and drink pricing at sports stadiums after working a Major League Baseball game as a vendor at Pittsburgh’s PNC Park a few summers ago. I’d quit my job as a Wall Street Journal staff reporter. I was up for stuff.

A friend suggested vending at ballgames. You could make a few hundred bucks a game being one of those guys who walks around and sells beer from a box, he said. With prices so high, his promise of good money sounded right.

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