The Giants play has certainly plummeted this season and some fans may still argue that their ticket sales are still overpriced.
For a ticket into MetLife Stadium for Sunday’s game against the Saints, the cheapest ticket before fees was listed as $1, per NFL’s Ralph Vacchiano.
Several seats were up for grabs with other tickets up in the nose bleed section ranged from $7 to $12. Those closer to the field could be seen listed with a $22 price tag.
The highest ticket price seen in Vacchiano’s screenshot of the Vivid Seats listings was still under $100 at $86.
MetLife has seen more seats left open this season, along with fans leaving games early due to the state of their 2-11 team.
And for those fans that do show up, they’re not against letting their team know how they feel with cheers and provoking posters.
A banner flew across the East Rutherford, New Jersey sky on Sunday morning before kickoff, reading “MR. MARA ENOUGH – PLZ FIX THIS DUMPSTER FIRE.’’
It’s clear some fans no longer feel they need to buy into the Giants, who have failed to build off the 9-7 winning season in 2022 under Brian Daboll and Daniel Jones.
And it’s hard to blame them.
The Giants have not won a game since Oct. 6 as Jones struggles.
They stuck with the 2019 No.6 overall pick until Week 10 for the Giants’ embarrassing 20-17 overtime loss to the lowly Panthers in Munich, Germany. Jones was in the second year of a four-year, $160 million extension.
The following week, Jones was granted a release and the Giants skipped over second-stringer Drew Lock to put Tommy DeVito in the starting spot. Many have thought the more was to appeal to the fans after the New Jersey native provided a spark for the team in 2023, going 3-3 upon a Jones injury.
However, whatever was there last season couldn’t be found in DeVito’s one shot, which saw the Giants lose 30-7 to the Buccaneers.
A week later, it didn’t matter that Lock was under center. The Giants still proved to be just as bad in their loss to the Cowboys on Thanksgiving, 27-20, for their seventh consecutive defeat in a season that is supposed to be “celebrating” their 100th season.