The Minnesota Vikings no longer are fans of paper tickets. By transitioning to a fully electronic process for both training camp and home games at U.S. Bank Stadium, the club is better able to ensure a secure ticketing process and alert fans to important updates through their mobile app.
It sounds terrific -- and a little sad, too. Ticket stubs are among the most treasured mementos for sports fans. They often represent special occasions in our lives -- a father and son's first game; a jaw-dropping comeback (and collapse) etched in memory; an unforgettable day with friends that set the bar for all outings to come.
No, these aren't throwaway pieces of paper, discarded like fast-food restaurant receipts. Ticket stubs mean a lot, and will mean even more now that they are relics.
So we asked you to send us pictures of stubs near to your heart, and tell us the story behind them. Here are a few of your stories, edited lightly for clarity.
Dennis Moore
September 18, 1966, while living in Silver Bay, Minn., my dad and I took the train from Goldfine's By the Bridge in Duluth to watch the Vikings play my favorite player, Johhny Unitas and the Baltimore Colts. While cheering wildly for the Colts, a Vikings fan told me to "sit down or else." My dad, wanting no part of this, also told me to "sit down or else." So I did!! ... January 9, 1977, a friend and I flew on a Vikings charter to Super Bowl XI. Cost: $20 per ticket!! We went to Disneyland on Saturday, the game on Sunday, and flew back to Minnesota where the temperature was 30 below zero...but a good time was had by all.
Patrick Burns
I have ticket form their first game ever -- in Sioux Falls, S.D. My grandfather promoted the preseason game vs. the Cowboys and it was the first pro game that Fran Tarkenton ever played in.