German club sells 72,000 tickets for game in empty stadium to raise funds

Dynamo's Philipp Hosiner, left, with Darmstadt's Lars Lukas Mai, during their German Bundesliga 2nd round match at the Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion in Dresden, Dec 22, 2020.
Dynamo's Philipp Hosiner, left, with Darmstadt's Lars Lukas Mai, during their German Bundesliga 2nd round match at the Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion in Dresden, Dec 22, 2020. Copyright Robert Michael/AP
By Associated Press
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German clubs have pioneered innovative fundraising ideas after the pandemic hurt teams' incomes.

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German third-tier football club Dynamo Dresden has said it sold more than 72,000 tickets for a game played in an empty stadium with no fans.

Former East German champion Dynamo offered fans the “ghost tickets” — named after the German habit of dubbing empty-stadium matches “ghost games” — for €5 as a way to raise funds for the club during the coronavirus pandemic. Fans could receive a commemorative ticket to keep.

The 72,112 tickets sold for Tuesday's German Cup game against Darmstadt was more than double the capacity of Dresden's stadium. Only two games in the club's history, both away games, had more people in attendance, Dresden said.

Dresden lost the game 3-0 to Darmstadt, which plays a division above Dynamo in the league.

German clubs have pioneered innovative fundraising ideas after the pandemic hurt teams' incomes.

When German soccer shut down in the spring, third-tier club Uerdingen sold “virtual tickets” for a fictional game. Top-division side Borussia Mönchengladbach offered fans the chance to have their photos printed onto cardboard cutouts for home games, an idea quickly copied by sports teams around the world.

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