Australia consumer watchdog probing
U.S. game
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[August 23, 2019]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia's consumer watchdog has
launched an investigation into Thursday's basketball World Cup
warmup game between the United States and Australia in Melbourne
following hundreds of complaints from disgruntled spectators.
Fans, already miffed by the absence of elite NBA players, expressed
outrage on social media over seating arrangements at Docklands
stadium where many were left with restricted views despite paying
top dollar for tickets.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said it
was probing the event and would address seating concerns with
organizers before the second match between the teams at the same
venue on Saturday.
"We take allegations of misleading behavior very seriously
and the penalties for breaching the Act are significant," ACCC
Chairman Rod Sims told reporters in Sydney on Friday.
"... we have an active investigation under way as to whether there's
been any breaches of the Act in relation to this event."
A crowd of 51,218 paid ticket prices ranging from A$69.90 ($47) for
the cheapest children's seats up to well over a thousand dollars for
premium, courtside seats to see the Olympic champions beat Australia
102-86.
Promoters TEG Live and Basketball Australia, the sport's national
governing body, conceded "some fans" felt their "expectations
weren't met" by their purchased seats but said feedback was strongly
positive.
"We appreciate that it was a different viewing experience than many
basketball fans are used to because the event was staged within a
traditional football stadium," they said in a joint statement on
Friday.
They added that 200 of the 11,000 fans who had purchased floor
seating to Thursday's game were relocated promptly while only two
refunds were requested.
NO LEBRON
Organizers were already under scrutiny for using high-profile NBA
players such as LeBron James and Steph Curry in their marketing
efforts only for them to skip the games.
Actor Russell Crowe was among spectators left cold by the views of
the raised court at the venue, which is mostly used for top flight
Australian Rules football matches.
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"$1500 a ticket for this view. AUS v USA. Jokes on me," Crowe wrote
on Twitter, describing the event as a "farce" and posting a photo
showing a restricted view of the court.
"If you weren’t among 50,000 there and you chose to watch it on tv
at home, good decision."
Fans who paid hundreds dollars for premium tickets at ground level
at Docklands were sat on plastic chairs cable-tied together with no
elevation to view the court, which was raised nearly a meter from
the ground.
"I paid $162 per seat to be in the gods watching a b-grade @usabasketball
vs @BasketballAus match," wrote one Twitter user next to a picture
showing the court far away.
Melbourne newspaper Herald Sun dubbed the game "Australia's Fyre
Festival", in reference to the aborted 2017 music festival in the
Bahamas which resulted in lawsuits and the jailing of the promoter.
Visit Victoria, the tourism and major events agency under the
Victoria state government, used public funds to help secure the
Melbourne games.
"The Labor government paid money to bring this event here. They
share responsibility for the disappointment of thousands of
basketball fans," the state's opposition leader Michael O'Brien told
the Herald Sun.
"It’s a rip-off that people paid hundreds of dollars for a plastic
chair, a blocked view and teams that didn't feature the superstars
promised."
The United States play a third fixture against Canada at the Sydney
Super Dome on Monday.
(Additional reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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