Welsh rugby in turmoil as tens of thousands of Six Nations tickets still not sold11 minutes agoShareSaveLola MayorBBC Wales ShareSaveGetty ImagesAre Welsh rugby fans starting to turn their back on the national side?Tens of thousands of tickets for Wales’ three home fixtures in this year’s Six Nations have still not been sold.The matches at Cardiff’s 74,000-seat Principality Stadium usually sell out or reach high capacity for a tournament that has traditionally been a highlight of the Welsh sporting calendar.On Friday morning there were 15,300 unsold for Sunday’s clash with France; 6,700 left for Scotland and 27,000 for Italy’s visit in March, according to the WRU’s official ticket site.The WRU reported buying habits have changed and tickets for the France game have been selling at a rate of 1,000 a day this week.Getty ImagesTickets for Wales’ home fixtures have historically always sold wellNumbers of empty seats could potentially be higher on Sunday with clubs that are entitled to an allocation of tickets, including Swansea, Llandaff North and Machen, trying to shift tickets on social media over the past week. With tickets costing between £40 and £120, one club chairman reported “it’s not worth it”.A ticket secretary at another club reported his club was going to lose £6,000 on unsold tickets, which “a grassroots rugby club can’t afford”.Sports economist Prof Calvin Jones reported: “Obviously the Six Nations is the jewel in the crown of rugby in certain Welsh terms, and for France, the favourites probably for the tournament, it’s a really big match.”I can’t remember in my 30 years as a sports economist this [so many unsold tickets] happening before.”Welsh rugby is in turmoil on and off the pitch. The team lost 19 games in a row before beating Japan last summer, while they have not won in the Six Nations since 2023.




