Student Football Ticket Information

Randall Stewart —  September 6, 2012 — Leave a comment

Many of you have been frustrated about the lack of communication from the Student Ticketing Office about how to get football tickets to this weekend’s game if you weren’t fortunate enough to get season tickets through the lottery. We did a little digging and found the following information on USC’s official website for students to claim unused tickets from season ticket holders for each individual game:

Students interested in securing tickets who do not already have a season ticket will receive an email on Thursday with two links, also listed below. One will give students the option to claim available lower deck tickets, and the other will give students the option to claim available upper deck tickets. Then, students should follow the steps on the website to load or print their tickets.

This site has some helpful information about the whole new procedure for this season. You should have also received an email with this same info. If you don’t see it, be sure to check your junk folder. Included on the site are step-by-step instructions on how to claim lower deck or upper deck seats, as well as the links to actually go through the process for the lower and upper decks.

If you have any questions, you can call the student ticket office at 803-777-4274. You can also visit the office in person, but it’s been moved to the Colonial Life Arena for this week. Just go in the glass doors at the corner of Lincoln and Greene Streets and you’ll see the ticket office down the stairs in the atrium.

Hope this helps everyone get ready for Saturday’s big game against East Carolina. Don’t forget to check Garnet Report every day this season for full football coverage! Go Cocks!

 

Randall Stewart

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Randall is a senior at USC majoring in Sport and Entertainment Management. He's spent three seasons covering high school football for various newspapers, spent 11 days in Omaha covering the 2012 College World Series, and has had articles appear in seven different newspapers. Even Clemson's student paper. Which is probably either the high or low point of his career.