What happens when you don’t have Red Sox tickets but you want Red Sox tickets?

Good luck if you try to use the scalpers outside Fenway Park.

Fenway Scalper
“Tickets…tickets? Buyin’ or selling? Buyin’ or selling?”

Pass. I once tried to get tickets to a Bartolo Colon/Tim Wakefield matchup and the guy wanted like $250 each. Uhh, yeah, no. Maybe in the World Series, but not in August, bud.

And of course, in February, if you don’t win the Red Sox lottery, you are not getting Green Monster tickets and if you don’t win the other lottery, you’re not getting Yankees games tickets, either.

BUT…if you used TiqIQ you could score some great seats at very, very good prices. There’s no cigar-smoking hustler here with a hooded-sweatshirt standing on the bridge next to the Cask n Flagon, trying to drain you of every penny in your bank account. Spare yourself.

This is a company who can get you the best prices on seats you want and you get to take advantage of Fire Brand for it.

Go over to the right of the page and look. There are seriously good games and the prices are fair. You won’t laugh and think ‘yeah right’ like when you see them being scalped on Craigslist. This is safe, secure and the intelligence is built into the program. TiqIQ is where Tickets Meet Intelligence. That is literally their slogan. They are an event ticket aggregator that tracks prices and individual ticket listings in a dynamically changing ticket market. Just go over and pick out a game.

The other point I want to make about TiqIQ is that they brought on a new partner called ScoreBig that let’s you actually name a price you’re willing to pay and see if sellers will match it. With TiqIQ’s new ‘Make an Offer’ option, you can tell the seller what you’re willing to pay. Keep in mind, offers are not always accepted, but just having the ability to name a price is a refreshing twist. The catch is that in order for the right to name a price, you lose the ability to choose a specific seat. Instead, the seller is committing to get you a seat within a specific area or zone. You still have the ability to choose different zones, but inside those zones, the seller gets to choose where you sit.

It’s really your choice. Pick out any seat you want (though probably not John Henry’s seat that Kevin Millar is in all the time lately) and have fun without breaking the bank OR name a price you are willing to pay and they will try to find you a matching seller, willing to take your bid.

For the Orioles, TiqIQ recommends taking a crack at ‘three-star’ deals. These tickets have a list price of $66, but we have it on good advice that $30 may get you into the house.

Take a look and hit up a game here for the stretch run. Click on “MAKE AN OFFER” below for a link to Wednesday O’s Game:

You can thank us later.