Early ordering for the 2002 Olympic Games ends today

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Today could be the last chance to get front row seats to the 2002 Olympics.

Midnight today is the deadline for early ticket purchases, which get preferential treatment for seat assignments.

Regular ordering will be open until December 12, but after today, all tickets will be on a first-come, first-served basis. During the first two weeks of ordering, which started Oct. 10, all ticket buyers have an equal chance of getting into the front row.

"My advice is, get in early," said Mitt Romney, head of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee. He said the tickets are already going faster than the committee expected.

More than $40 million worth of tickets has been sold to U.S. buyers, nearly 60 percent of the overall in-country goal of $68 million, according to the SLOC. More than 20,000 orders had been placed by Friday and an additional 17,000 potential buyers had downloaded the online ticket forms.

More than half of the seats for freestyle skiing, figure skating, giant slalom, snowboarding and skeleton, a type of headfirst luge, have been snapped up.

Not everything has been rosy, however.

Customers have complained about ticket prices, which run as high as $885 a seat for the opening ceremony, and large families have struggled with the SLOC's limit of four tickets per order for some events. And the time-consuming ordering process has drawn complaints, as well.


Originally on page 7 in the 10-24-2000 issue of the Daily.

 

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