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Empty seats at Olympics as 2.5M seek tickets daily

About 2.5 million people a day are fighting to get their hands on Olympic tickets with pressure on the ticketing website running right through the night, organizers said.
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/ Source: Reuters

About 2.5 million people a day are fighting to get their hands on Olympic tickets with pressure on the ticketing website running right through the night, organizers said.

Demand appears to have been boosted by and the start of the track and field events in the main stadium on Friday.

Frustration with an online system that has been unable to cope with demand has been compounded by television footage of empty seats in so-called accredited areas set aside for Olympic officials, sports federations, national Olympic committees, athletes and the media.

London Olympic organizers (LOCOG) have asked those who do not intend to use their seats in these area to give them up, and have trimmed the seating in an effort to make more tickets available to the public.

But one in five of the accredited seats remained empty on Thursday.

LOCOG urged sports fans to persevere.

"A lot of them are applying for the same things, so obviously as they get to the check-out, they find that someone else has pipped them to the post and the product is not there that they've ordered," a spokeswoman told reporters on Friday.

She said 100,000 tickets had been sold during a 48-hour period, but tens of thousands remained.

"So it is about persistence," she said.

Image: Empty seats are pictured during in the w
Empty seats are pictured during in the women's preliminary pool A volleyball match between Dominican Republic and Japan in the 2012 London Olympic Games in London on August 1, 2012. AFP PHOTO/KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEVKIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/GettyImagesKirill Kudryavtsev / AFP

"People are going into the system, they are successfully buying tickets, they are successfully attending the Games.

"But the sheer volume of people on the site, all through the day, and all through the night, by the way, is vast."

LOCOG has reclaimed thousands of accredited seats, including 2,400 for athletics, and sold them within hours.

The last-minute sales have boosted the occupancy rate in accredited areas from 60 percent on Tuesday to 81 percent on Thursday. No figures were available for earlier in the week, when vacancies were at their highest.

About 75 percent of the total 8.8 million tickets were sold to the British public. Spectator occupancy in all venues was 92 percent on Thursday.

LOCOG put another 275,000 tickets on sale this week, mainly for soccer, which became available after logistics such as TV camera positions were sorted out.

Friday and Saturday are expected to be the busiest days so far at the Games, with 200,000 people in the Olympic Park, up from 135,000 on Thursday.

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