Daniel Levy will have expected ‘backlash’ to decision that punishes Tottenham fans
Daniel Levy will have already weighed up the cost of a “backlash” from Tottenham supporters against the financial gain of doing away with senior season tickets, says Paul Robinson.
Spurs announced their updated ticketing charter on 6 March (official website) where it was confirmed there will no longer be senior season tickets available to purchase from the 2025-26 season.
The club tried to defend its position by saying the number of OAPs has increased fourfold from the number they had at the old White Hart Lane.
The changes in prices for currently held senior tickets will change incrementally until the 2029-30 season when they will be brought in line with those paid by young adults.
It was a decision that Stan Collymore described as “simply outrageous greed” on X (12 March). Robinson acknowledged that it will affect fans but said it will have been a business decision where the club weighed up the negative reaction against the money they can make.
“It’s tough, there are concessions everywhere, whether it’s transport, travel, airfares, whatever it is you do have that concession,” he exclusively told Tottenham News.
“And you question the decision as to why. There are still concessions for children’s tickets and the OAP tickets…at the end of the day it’s a business and from a club point of view they’re taking up the seat of someone who will have the same view and the same matchday experience as them. On the other argument so is a child and there’s still concessions everywhere.
“The financial gain of changing it against the backlash of what they’ve had to deal with that’s probably what they’ve had to deal with.
“You look at people who’ve made these decisions and in the meeting or wherever they sat down they’ll have known there’d be some kind of reaction and it was never going to be a positive reaction with the price of seasons tickets going up and then taking away the concessions for OAPS it’s the fans again who get punished.”
Tottenham in season-ticket mishap
It is a business, that much is true but this decision feels particularly misguided and to do it without at least some form of consultation or compromise to be reached feels like a misstep.
It’s one thing that season tickets are going up by six per cent, that decision alone is pretty tough to swallow when prices across the board are so expensive.

But to do away with senior tickets entirely seems like a bad PR move, especially given the commercial successes Tottenham are enjoying right now.
Hopefully, there will be a rethink on this one, although no one is really holding their breath that there will be.
In other Tottenham news, one ace is likely to miss the Luton clash with a thigh injury.
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