Lynah Attendance

Started by BearLover, December 08, 2025, 12:02:54 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Trotsky

I used Cornell hockey as a first date for years and even if the relationships did not survive the fandom of each victim seems to have.

ugarte

I wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.

stereax

Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.
I mean, they definitely didn't mention it during law school orientation, LOL
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

ugarte

Quote from: stereax on January 17, 2026, 05:21:41 PM
Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.
I mean, they definitely didn't mention it during law school orientation, LOL
you're not even supposed to know there's a hockey team

Trotsky

#79
Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.
From the early 80s: these plus the fancy pants 2x a year Cornell Dining thingy (edit: Cross-Country Gourmet!) and the SCA banquet at Risley.

stereax

Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:24:36 PM
Quote from: stereax on January 17, 2026, 05:21:41 PM
Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.
I mean, they definitely didn't mention it during law school orientation, LOL
you're not even supposed to know there's a hockey team
I wish this was a joke
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

David Harding

Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.
How about giving every RA one or two tickets to an early season game?  Or, if the appointments are decided early enough, a late season game in the year before they start.  https://scl.cornell.edu/residential-life/housing/contact-us/student-employment/resident-advisor-ra-selection/resident-advisor-position-description 

Iceberg

Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.

I don't recall sports mentioned very much at all during orientation week, as the focus was very much on getting us to meet people and getting acclimated to being in college (this was early 2010's). In fact, I only went to my first hockey game because some people in my dorm asked me to come along. Unfortunately, it was this one, but I went to several games afterwards the next few years.

BearLover

Quote from: Iceberg on January 17, 2026, 06:20:09 PM
Quote from: ugarte on January 17, 2026, 05:20:11 PMI wonder how hard they sell it during orientation these days. It sounded to me like back in the 90s it was pitched as THE thing that defined campus culture up there with traying on the slope, the rate of suicide being overstated and dragon day.

I don't recall sports mentioned very much at all during orientation week, as the focus was very much on getting us to meet people and getting acclimated to being in college (this was early 2010's). In fact, I only went to my first hockey game because some people in my dorm asked me to come along. Unfortunately, it was this one, but I went to several games afterwards the next few years.
We got a penalty that game for a fan throwing a fish on the ice

Chousnake

#84
Unfortunately, it's a sign of the times.  Back in the 70s and 80s, tickets were like gold and the only way you could get in to any game was with season tickets. I was fortunate to have a friend as a freshman who knew about the Lynah experience and a few of us were lucky to get season tickets. We sat in H behind the goal.  I was hooked. I had season tickets in Section D the next three years with my fraternity.  I don't think I ever missed a game. Every game was an event and the social calendar revolved around the games.Part of it was also that there was a hockey culture at Cornell then.  Lynah was used for intramural hockey, free skate, and many fraternities rented ice time and played pick up hockey. I played hockey in Lynah 2-3 times a week with my fraternity and I could barely skate before I got there. 

My sons attended Cornell in the early to mid 2010s and one was a hockey player.  I told them to make sure they got hockey tickets.  By then, it was easy to get tickets and the games were no longer a big deal.  And there was not any intramural ice hockey or ice times anymore.  I went to a few games with them and it wasn't the same. The son who played hockey in high school never skated at Lynah Rink once in his 4 years there.  I probably was on the ice close to 100 times.

 I think the decline of fraternities at Cornell is a big factor.  Back in the 80s and 90s, there were 50 fraternities.  Fraternity ticket blocks were a big deal and attending hockey games was part of the culture.  My guess is that fraternities made up a significant portion of the student sections.  Fraternities are barely surviving at Cornell for many reasons today.

This is happening with all sports.  Lacrosse games filled the crescent in the late 70s.  Cornell is a national power now and averages about 1500 a game.  The Jets and Giants used to have long wait lists for season tickets. I had season tickets to the Jets for decades and the people around me in my section were always there. Now you can buy tickets for any game you want for peanuts and stadiums are filled with fans from visiting teams.  With the advent of big screen tvs and the internet and Stub Hub and streaming, live attendance at sporting events is not a big deal anymore. 

BearLover

The student attendance looks pitiful on the stream. A and D both look nearly empty.

upprdeck

Athletics puts zero effort into trying to create attendance. Other than trying to bump ticket sales for Harvard weekend nothing else is done.

Big Dingus

Probably right to say that Lynah is now of finally dead. The smartphone always reigns supreme

stereax

Dear god some of you are insufferable.
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

fastforward

Quote from: stereax on January 18, 2026, 12:48:41 PMDear god some of you are insufferable.
🙄
And when it's sold out I hear a few griping it's packed too tight and too loud
Can't please everybody