<p>Ok, so who's going to win the game today?</p>
<p>I predict that USC will beat Vanderbilt 21-3!</p>
<p>Wow imagep! You have great insight. xD</p>
<p>I went. I was actually able to get a student ticket this time, though not in the student section.</p>
<p>I find out tonight if I have to go through the on-demand process again. Which thoroughly sucks, by the way.</p>
<p>OK you football freaks. What about the big game this weekend vs Auburn?</p>
<p>Didn’t get a ticket. Again.</p>
<p>Mom will be getting on three computers back home to try and get me a ticket.</p>
<p>No idea what the score will be. It’d be nice to be 5-0, though we will not win if they keep playing the way they’ve been playing in the first quarter or so. They’ve got to step it up.</p>
<p>Hey imagep, great job! Made me laugh and happy that someone finally replied to my post. We live in CA and are interested in South Carolina. AUgirl, are you a student? Is it common that a student can’t go to the football games? This is not good :|</p>
<p>So far there have been two home games and every student who wanted a ticket was able to get one.</p>
<p>That does not, by any means, mean that it is easy to get a ticket, because it is not. You have to want a ticket to get one, but if you want one and work for it, you will get one.</p>
<p>They typically offer 11,000-13,000 tickets to students per game and 30,000 students are eligible, but about 10,000 of those students are grad students, so I’m not sure how many of them want tickets and then there are a good bit of students who either go home or can’t go or have some other commitment or just aren’t interested in football.</p>
<p>Since we’re better at football, more people want to go. The ‘bigger’ games like Auburn are harder to get tickets for. Navy was hard because it was the opening game. Vanderbilt was relatively easy for some reason.</p>
<p>If you want a detailed explanation of the ticketing process, I can give you one, but I thought I’d go ahead and respond while I had time. :)</p>
<p>Thank-you!</p>