It's better than anything they've ever done. There's several Brewers games and a White Sox game in addition to decent games vs. Dodgers, Padres, and others. I think the way they did it was fair to everyone who has added their name to the list. They are going to probably sell out all of those early April/May games now and, in turn, they let people have the chance to buy a Sox game and some decent night games. They aren't just going to offer up the 9 best games on the schedule to make you happy. Frankly, it's not even needed to offer anything to keep the 15,000+ people on the waiting list. Some people can complain about anything... Was I really complaining?? I can't afford to use up all my vacation time on Cubs games, therefore I'm abstaining. Last year, I had no tickets to open the season and wound up going to 8 or 9 games and the playoff game. On my limited budget/limited vacation time that was about perfect for me. I see no need to lock myself into certain (less than ideal) dates now, and force myself to pass on tickets when they come up later. You touched on it briefly, but then kinda went away from it, let's not pretend this is some altruistic move by the Cubs to reward fan loyalty. It's a (very intelligent) move to sell out those April/May day games that are the toughest sells. They don't care if they're selling that Sox game now, or selling the Mets/Dodgers games now, or if they're doing it in 3 weeks. They'll still make the same amount of money either way, and the only side of the scalper argument they likely took under consideration is that it will limit the amount of tickets their competition in the resell market will have. And I never demanded anything from the organization(except competent management). There's a limited amount of supply with an insane amoutn of demand, I'm not expecting them to offer me 9 games from July on against top opponents, but I also wasn't expecting 6 games in the first month and a half when I saw the email heading.