![]() It’s basically Daniel Tiger for adults.Įxamples of chanting that are easy for even little kids to get: “DE-FENSE!” when the Nuggets don’t have the ball - and when the Nuggets score a three-pointer, which they’re doing quite a bit right now, the announcer says the scorer’s name in this format: “Gary Harris for one! Two!” and then the crowd shouts “Three!”ĭuring timeouts, emcees come out onto the court and have people play dumb games like oversized skee-ball, or Rocky the mascot tries to shoot the ball backward over his head from half court and comes thrillingly close to making the shot almost every time. It’s super repetitive and there’s chanting and music during the normal run of play. As for the on-court product: Kids can grasp basketball pretty well right away. You can pay with a credit card for basically anything else in the arena, so I can only conclude that this is part of some truly sick study dreamed up by childless grad students at the University of Are You Kidding Me Right Now. I repeat: Dippin Dots stands are cash-only. ![]() Upshot: You should be able to get in the door for like $15-20 per person. You want to sit closer? It’ll cost you more and I just frankly wouldn’t recommend it unless your kid has already demonstrated a pretty good attention span for these games anyway.ĭippin Dots ice cream. start time and want to decide based on how the rest of the day goes. You can seriously wait until really close to the beginning of the game and still find stuff available, in case you think you might be pushing your luck with a 7 p.m. I’ve twice used this to get pretty good last-minute tickets for cheaper than I thought I’d get them - once for a game featuring the not-quite-world-champion Golden State Warriors and once for an afternoon game with my kid. I use the Flash Seats app, but you can also use their website, to hunt for secondary-market tickets. So you can get last-minute tickets pretty easily. The other thing worth knowing here is that the Nuggets draw really poorly. Those promo nights are extremely limited - as I write this, the only two left on the books for 2017 are March 4 and March 26. More flexible than that, but not quite as enticing, is the Junior Jam deal: You get an adult ticket and a youth ticket together for the price of one regular ticket. The Nuggets offer family promo nights, “4 tickets starting at just $80 and your tickets will be loaded with $60 ($15 per ticket) in credit to spend on food and beverage.” ![]() On tickets: There are limited promo nights, if you have the right family configuration. You can talk about sportsmanship and music and big-event etiquette and you can field some questions your kid wouldn’t have asked somewhere else. ![]() Thinking of going to a Denver Nuggets game with your kid(s)? Great! It’s a good time. A kid takes in a Denver Nuggets game at Pepsi Center. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |