Patriots Playoff Tickets

New England Patriots

Patriots Tickets

Patriots Playoff Tickets

New England Patriots Superbowl

Patriots Blog

Gillette Stadium Tickets

Front Row Patriots Tickets

Foxboro Tickets

Foxboro Ticket King

Your place to find hard to get tickets for real Patriots fans.

 Foxboro Ticket King was started out of frustration of trying to balance the difficulty of finding GOOD seats with the need for a dedicated sales team. We guarantee you will be able to find the perfect tickets for your budget, needs and wants.  Our variety allows us to provide you with OPTIONS!

Foxboro History

After two decades at Foxboro Stadium, Gillette Stadium is a major upgrade from the Patriots former home. In the mid to late 1990’s, Patriots owner Robert Kraft proposed the idea for a new stadium. The Patriots needed a new stadium because Foxboro Stadium had fewer amenities and seats than newer stadiums had. After several bonds were not passed, Kraft decided to use his own money to build the Patriots a new stadium. Construction on the Patriots new stadium began in early 2000. Like many other NFL teams, the Patriots sold the naming rights to the stadium. Originally, CMGI Investments purchased the naming rights. However, in August 2002, the Gillette Company bought the naming rights to the stadium after CMGI Investments underwent financial failures.
 


The New England Patriots played their first game at Gillette Stadium on September 9, 2002. Gillette Stadium is a vast improvement over Foxboro Stadium. The stadium has around 68,000 seats, with the majority on both sidelines. Gillette Stadium consists of three seating decks. The lower section of seats nearly enclose the field, while the club and upper levels of seating are on both sides of the gridiron. All of the seats are angled toward the 50 yard line giving fans an excellent view of the game. Gillette Stadium has 80 luxury suites, and over 6,000 club seats. Two massive video/scoreboards are located beyond both endzones. Gillette Stadium also has a 120,000 square foot Patriots Club lounge that is used year-around. Bringing a New England feel to the game is a lighthouse motif and a bridge. These are located where many fans enter the stadium at the North Portal Plaza. Gillette Stadium is also the home of the New England Revolutionary (MLS). The Patriots hope to have years of success at Gillette Stadium.

 

Foxboro Stadium:

Foxboro Stadium is quintessential New England. The permanent home of the Patriots - thanks to stadium owner Bob Kraft, who purchased the team in 1993 using the lease as a purchasing wedge - is as raw as a New England winter and as chilly as a New England spring, with no frills and seldom many thrills (14-50 record through 1993). Being a Patriots fan is like serving on an Atlantic fishing boat: lots of ups and downs, plenty of wet weather and not a lot of excitement.
Billy Sullivan owned the franchise when it played at Boston University. It "graduated" to Fenway Park, then to Boston College and Harvard, before Bay State Raceway owner E.M. Loew offered a piece of land less than an hour from Boston, Worcester and Providence.
 


A vote was won from the townsfolk of Foxboro - the only town whose selectmen can decide NFL Monday night football schedules - and the first game was played less than a year after groundbreaking.
 


It's a very basic stadium with one big bonus - great sightlines. There are good seats everywhere. And $10 million has been put into improvements since Kraft bought the stadium, with another $60 million promised.
 


Former Coach Bill Parcells said he became convinced of fan support when 42,810 showed up for a Jets game in 1993 with bonechilling winds gusting to 68 mph, accompanied by relentless sheets of rain.

 

On August 14, 2000 as written to Street & Smith's SportsBusiness Journal Pat Sullivan writes: The listing of of public-private breakdowns of stadium costs [July 17, 2000 - Street & Smith's SportsBusiness Journal] listed the cost of Foxboro Stadium as $61 million. That is slightly off the mark. Foxboro Stadium was built in 327 days for slightly more than $7.1 million, which was $200,000 over its initial budget of $6.9 million. At approximately $100 per seat, Foxboro (designed by David Berg and built by J.F. White Construction) remains one of the great stadium construction miracles of all time.
 


It is also a miracle for another reason. Since 1971, well over 15 million people have passed through Foxboro's turnstiles at literally no expense to the taxpayers of Foxboro or Massachusetts. Because of a then unique ticket surcharge, the town of Foxboro has been paid millions of dollars. Unlike many of the stadiums built or proposed today, direct, attributable revenue has been generated by this arrangement.
 


These agreements and the stadium itself represent the tireless efforts of my father; William H. "Billy" Sullivan, to ensure the long-term viability of pro football in New England. His tenacity and creativity built Foxboro Stadium. As an example, he established one of the nation's first naming-rights agreements in 1970 when he persuaded Schaefer Brewing Co. to put its name on the facility. The price: a whopping $150,000.
 

Boston University Field 1960-1962
Patriots Tix
Boston University Field was the Patriots’ first "home." The AFL’s Boston Patriots played there from 1960-62


Fenway Park Mid 60's
Pats Tix
Fenway Park has been home to the Boston Red Sox since 1912, but the Patriots were co-tenants during the mid-60s. To avoid scheduling conflicts with the Red Sox, many of the Patriots’ September games were played on the road or at alternate sites.

In 1967, the Patriots first "home" game in Fenway Park was October 22, their seventh game of the season.


Alabama's Legion Field 1968
Patriots Playoffs Tickets
The Patriots hosted the New York Jets at Alabama’s Legion Field in their 1968 "home opener." A capacity crowd cheered on former Crimson Tide quarterback Joe Namath as the Jets defeated the Patriots 47-31. That year, the Jets went on to win the Super Bowl.


Boston College's Alumni Stadium 1963 & 1969
New England Patriots
It is not uncommon to see fans rush the field after a big game. But, it was a little different to see fans take the field during a game. On Aug. 16, 1970 at Boston College, Patriots fans were forced from the stands due to a fire that ignited under the bleachers.

When the game resumed, the Redskins torched the Patriots 45-21 in the preseason opener. Boston College’s Alumni Stadium was "home" to the Patriots during the 1963 and 1969 seasons.


Harvard Stadium 1970
Patriots Tickets
In 1970, the Patriots played their home games at Harvard Stadium.


Schaeffer/Sullivan/Foxboro Stadium 1971 - 2001
Patriots Ticket Broker
In 1971, Schaeffer Stadium was constructed for a little more than $6 million. The name has changed (twice), but for the past 29 seasons the "home" venue has remained the same.


Gillette Stadium 2002 - present
New Patriots Stadium
Gillette Stadium is the Patriots’ newest "home."