Warriors' remaining tickets for Game 7 sell out in under 5 minutes

ByDARREN ROVELL
May 30, 2016, 12:46 AM
Golden State Warriors player Klay Thompson (C) reacts after shooting a three point basket against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second half of the NBA Western Conference Finals basketball game six, May 28, 2016.
Golden State Warriors player Klay Thompson (C) reacts after shooting a three point basket against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second half of the NBA Western Conference Finals basketball game six, May 28, 2016.
Larry W. Smith/EPA

— -- The deciding game of the Western Conference championship is, not surprisingly, a very hot ticket.

In fact, according to ticketing search engine TiqIQ, Monday night's game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Golden State Warriors has the second-highest list prices for an NBA Game 7 in the past five years ($960 per ticket).

The only Game 7 to top Monday night's matchup in Oakland was the 2013 NBA Finals Game 7 between the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs ($1,346 per ticket).

The Warriors put the few remaining tickets on sale Sunday night, with prices ranging from $230 to $2,150. They sold out in less than five minutes.

Those prices did not include any floor seats, which were sold out. But someone did go to the Warriors' resale site, run by Ticketmaster, and purchased two floor seats for $29,000 each.

A spokesman for StubHub, which has appealed a federal judge's decision to dismiss its lawsuit against the Warriors and Ticketmaster, said its average sold ticket for the game was $824, with the cheapest seat at $359. StubHub has accused the team and Ticketmaster of conspiring to control both the primary and secondary ticket markets.

Warriors officials have said that having Ticketmaster control both the primary and resale markets helps to make sure tickets are authentic. Warriors spokesperson Lisa Goodwin said the team had to turn away 80 fans for Game 5 at Oracle Arena on Thursday night because the tickets scanned as fraudulent.