South Korea hopes to boost slow ticket sales for Pyeongchang

With five months to go before the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics open, the Games are barely an afterthought for most South Koreans, with slow local ticket sales amid the biggest political scandal in years and a torrent of North Korean weapons tests.

Local ticket sales fall well short of organizers' goals

Lee Hee-beom, president of Pyeongchang's organizing committee, said he is optimistic South Korea can sell one million tickets domestically. (Matt Dunham, File/The Associated Press)

With five months to go before the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics open, the Games are barely an afterthought for most South Koreans, with slow local ticket sales amid the biggest political scandal in years and a torrent of North Korean weapons tests.

South Korea wants more than a million spectators for the Games that start in February and expects 70 per cent to be locals. But if South Koreans are excited about the Games, they didn't fully show it during the first phase of ticket sales between February and June — the 52,000 tickets purchased by locals during the period were less than seven per cent of the 750,000 seats organizers aim to sell domestically.

International sales got off to a faster start with more than half of the targeted 320,000 seats sold. But now there's fear that an increasingly belligerent North Korea, which has tested two ICBMs and its strongest ever nuclear bomb in recent weeks, might keep foreign fans away from Pyeongchang, a ski resort town about 80 kilometres south of the world's most heavily armed border.

South Korean Olympic organizers reopened online ticket sales on September 5 and hope for a late surge in domestic ticket sales as the Games draw closer. Locals purchased nearly 17,000 tickets on the first two days of resumed sales.

In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Lee Hee-beom, president of Pyeongchang's organizing committee, said the North is highly unlikely to cause problems during the Games because North Korean athletes could compete in the South. This is not yet clear, though. North Korea is traditionally weak at winter sports, though a figure skating pair has a chance to qualify and organizers are looking at ways to arrange special entries for North Korean athletes.

Lee also linked his optimism about ticket sales to South Korean experience managing past global events, including the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, three Asian Games and the 2002 World Cup soccer tournament.

"This is a country that sold more than 8 million tickets even for the Expo 2012 in Yeosu," said Lee, 68, a former Cabinet minister and corporate CEO. "We can definitely handle a million tickets."

Local apathy, exhaustion

Organizers have overcome construction delays, local conflicts over venues and a slow pace in attracting domestic sponsorships. They must now figure out how to create genuine local excitement for the Games and boost ticket sales.

The 1988 Olympics in Seoul were easier. Those Games marked South Korea's arrival on the world stage as a growing industrial power and budding democracy.

In what's now the world's 11th-richest nation, there's no longer an obvious public craving for the global attention brought by hosting a large sports event. There's also worry over the huge cost of hosting the Games and maintaining facilities that might go unused once the party leaves town.

Or perhaps South Koreans, after a whirlwind past year, are simply too tired to be enthusiastic about the Olympics. Millions took to the streets last year and early this year over a corruption scandal that eventually toppled the president from power and landed her in jail, where she remains during an ongoing trial.

It also doesn't help that South Korea has never really had a strong winter sports culture, said Heejoon Chung, a sports science professor at Busan's Dong-A University.

"I don't think there are many people who are willing to stay outdoors in the cold for hours to watch races on snow," he said.

Lee, the organizing committee president, is, unsurprisingly, more optimistic. Most South Koreans tend to wait until the last minute to buy tickets, and the atmosphere will improve once the Olympic torch relay arrives in South Korea in November, he said.

Empty venues a concern for organizers

A big worry is the prospect of seeing blocks of empty seats in alpine and cross-country skiing and other snow sports that South Koreans are largely uninterested in.

While organizers didn't provide specific sales figures by sport, they said most of the tickets purchased by South Koreans have been concentrated in a few events in figure skating, ice hockey, short-track and long-track speed skating, and the cheaper seats in the opening and closing ceremonies.

Lee said organizers will focus on selling the low-demand tickets to government organizations, public companies and schools over the next few months to solve the "polarization" in ticket sales.

Lodging could be another problem as tourists are already complaining about soaring room rates. Officials hope prices will stabilize after five new hotels are built by the end of the year, adding more than 2,000 rooms. The government is also planning to add hundreds of apartment rentals, and a 2,200-room cruise ship will serve as a floating hotel in the nearby port of Sokcho.

Organizers say a new high-speed rail line will link Seoul and Pyeongchang in an hour, starting in December, and will also allow travellers from the Seoul area to visit the Games and return home the same day.