There are three main options for buying tickets to a sporting event: Directly from the team; from websites like ScoreBig that obtain swaths of tickets from brokers, corporations and promoters or other sources; and from fans reselling tickets on StubHub or similar sites.
Each source has its advantages and drawbacks.
For example, buying from the team is the most direct way to get exactly what you want, but you’re paying retail. Why do that if you can avoid it?
Buying from individuals can be a good way to bypass a game sellout or get a good price on extra tickets the seller no longer needs. That could mean a lower price, but prepare to pay a lot more than retail for a hot ticket.
A good place to start if you’re taking this approach is SeatGeek. The site functions as a search engine for hundreds of ticket websites, including eBay, Ticketnetwork and Vividseats.
That can help give you an idea of the kinds of tickets that might be available for a given game and how much everyone from resellers to brokers are asking. The middleman sites mining tickets from brokers offer perhaps the most tantalizing prospect for big discounts.
Brokers often buy season tickets and make a killing from selling seats to highly anticipated games, say a matchup between the Yankees and the Red Sox. But less coveted games typically get sold at a discount. Alex Veiga, The Associated Press



