The official MLB debut in Europe was expected to spark a huge interest amongst fans of baseball on the Old Continent and the tickets for the two Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees matches at the Olympic Stadium in London were sold out in minutes. This, however, does not guarantee that the historic series on 29-30 June 2019 will be played in front of the full stands of the 60-thousandth facility. The reason is that price gaps between 30 and 385 pounds were redeemed by experienced speculators. They were able to take advantage of the opportunity of every user of the Ticketmaster platform. com to book eight tickets at a time. Because of the overloading of the system, the site itself constantly made mistakes, despite the assurance of the online dealers that everything was going on.
Of the three dates announced -;on December 3rd for pre-registered fans;on December 5 for national baseball federations in Europe;and on 6 December for free sale -;the seats were practically exhausted. Only a few hours later, however, a number of offers for the two games with double, triple, and even quadruple overpriced prices were displayed on different resale sites. Although there are about 120, 000 in total, few are the lucky ones who managed to get tickets in the right order. Much of the rest has overwhelmed hundreds of angry comments on the official pages of the MLB profile on Twitter and Twitter. Local organizers reported only that `if there are more tickets, registered fans will first learn. `It is unclear where more tickets would appear if the event was declared `sold out`.
The two matches between Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees in London were announced in March, and the specific dates were announced in early May. Subsequently, the red socks became MLB champions, further boosting the interest in next year`s first-ever regular Premier League games in Europe.
So far, Major Leag ha s staged official matches from its championship predicted by contacts with baseball tipsters on just two other continents outside of North America;Asia and Australia. The United Kingdom and Canada, which accepts professional baseball after Mexico (1996, 1999, 2018), Japan (2000, 2004, 2008, 2012), Puerto Rico (2001, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2018)) and Australia (2014).
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