Looking at the seat map there are two all-event tickets left in the lower bowl. But if you look at single sessions there are plenty of tickets available, especially for short programs earlier in the week. It just makes no sense to me why the LOC would put both all event and single session tickets for sale at the same time.
Yup, it was just as I suspected after comparing the all-event map to the individual seat map. Not to mention the three sections behind the judges never opening (although-- I know the ISU goes there but I would hope the skaters get put there this time, too, instead of way up at the top in the corner like in Boston).
105-109 never opened for all-event, they only opened overnight for individual tickets but I wouldn't want those seats anyways.
Seeing that there aren't a tremendous amount of people talking about this across social media, I'm thinking maybe bots were set up to grab a lot of the best seats on night one, particularly for the free skates. By the time
@thvu and I got in, which was only about 5 or so minutes later, there were ZERO choices left in any of the best seats until I reloaded my phone to death and someone's 15 minutes had timed out.
What I'd be curious in seeing is how many all-event tickets actually sold because based on the massive availability of the short programs still, I would not be at all surprised if that number is something like 200 or less. For reference, there are 2 lower bowl singular all-event seats left, but there are still 1,254 seats available for the lower bowl in the pairs short program.
ETA- now that said, I was fully prepared to get tickets today and sell off my first-night purchases, but I'm so happy I ended up snagging those ones because it really wasn't going to get better. One seat from the aisle on the side closer to the middle of the rink, two rows behind the most expensive section, and just off to the side of where the panels are sitting.