In coach David Beaty’s three years at the helm of the Kansas football program, the Jayhawks are an abysmal 3-33 and aren’t showing many signs of improvement.

Unsurprisingly, the team’s ticket sales are plummeting as the team continues to struggle, but that hasn’t stopped talk of $300 million in facilities improvements.

According to KUSports.com, the Jayhawks are selling about $6 million less per year in tickets than they were in 2009 — the peak year in recent Kansas football history:

A Journal-World review of Kansas Athletics Inc. finances found that KU needs to sell about $6 million in additional tickets per year just to get the program back to the brief glory days it had nearly a decade ago in the Mark Mangino era.

KU football ticket sales hit a recent peak of $9.5 million in 2009. In 2017, football ticket sales hit a new recent low of $3.4 million, according to NCAA reports filed by the university.

Though improved facilities would certainly draw some fans to the stadium, a better bet would be improving the product on the field.

However, it looks like it could be another long year on the gridiron in Lawrence, which means most Jayhawk fans will probably just stay at home until basketball season tips off.