Why was the attendance so low for Barcelona v Atletico Madrid?
Just 34,568 fans watched Barcelona against Atletico Madrid on Sunday evening, a La Liga match between two giants fighting for the title.
Both teams were packed with stars in a game filled with intrigue. How would Barca's on-loan Joao Felix do against the team who pushed him away last term (he scored the winner), or Memphis Depay do for Atletico on loan from Barcelona (the substitute didn’t do much)?
More people watched two games in England’s second tier at Leeds United and Sunderland last week. The attendance against Atletico was Barcelona’s lowest of the season so far, way down from the equivalent fixtures last term which attracted 80, 965.
There are numerous reasons why. The main one is that Barcelona are playing games at the city’s Olympic Stadium while Camp Nou is being rebuilt and expanded to hold 105,000. But even the Olympic Stadium, located high on Montjuic overlooking Barcelona, was well short of its 51,000 capacity on Sunday.
The stadium may be as beautiful as the views you get over Barcelona, accessible via a series of escalators climbing 150 metres above the city, but it wasn’t built for football and the views from thousands of seats are really poor. The stands are separated from the pitch by the athletics track which staged the 1992 Olympic Games. And there’s plenty of space around the track.
As a result, the seats behind the goals, especially on the upper tier, are so far from the pitch that it’s almost impossible to watch the game. Lower down, it’s difficult to judge the distances. Barcelona keep the first 15 rows empty, creating a poor image on television, though not as poor as for those fans who would have to sit in those low seats far from the pitch.
The tickets in this section were €55 each, plus a