Sevilla has sold out the visiting section for Wednesday’s match at the Estadio de la Cerámica, exhausting the 600 tickets made available after reporting on Monday that "ya se han vendido más de medio millar de entradas." The Villarreal-Sevilla fixture is scheduled for Wednesday at 19:00 hours.
The club says more than 500 fans will travel to support the team, and that it and Villarreal agreed to expand the away allocation beyond the original plan to meet demand. Sevilla announced this afternoon that the 600 tickets in the visiting section had sold out, making it the club’s largest organized away presence of the run-in.
Sevilla is also easing the cost of the trip. The round-trip bus fare has been set at 20 euros, the club will subsidize "sufragará más de la mitad del coste del desplazamiento," and the combined price of ticket plus bus comes to 50 euros. That package means supporters pay, in effect, roughly 30 euros for the entry and 20 euros for transport.
The numbers matter because this match lands at a critical moment in Sevilla’s season. The club sits three points above Alavés, who mark the relegation zone, and every point is precious with the campaign entering its last phase. After the visit to Villarreal, Sevilla will still have two league matches left: a home game against Real Madrid in Nervión and a final trip to Celta to close the season.
Sevilla’s push to move more than 500 fans to the Estadio de la Cerámica is the latest sign of a club mobilizing its resources to try to secure survival. The squad has already sold out its stadium for recent home matches against Real Sociedad and Espanyol; organizing travel, expanding the allocation and subsidizing buses are extensions of that same effort aimed at creating atmosphere on the road and easing barriers for supporters.
There is a strain in that success. Only Sevilla members could buy away tickets for the match in Villarreal, a restriction that leaves non-member supporters without access even as the club reports an overflow of demand. The allocation required negotiation between the clubs, and while Villarreal agreed to increase the visiting quota, the total remained capped at 600—enough for hundreds but not the thousands who might wish to travel if there were no limits.
The subsidy softens the financial hurdle: with the bus fare publicly set at 20 euros and the ticket-bus package at 50 euros, Sevilla is shouldering more than half of the transport cost to make attendance viable for members who otherwise might not go. For a club in a tight relegation battle, that is a calculated investment in atmosphere and momentum as much as in fan goodwill.
Wednesday’s match will be more than a logistics story; it will be a test of whether organized support and a packed away end can translate into points that matter. Sevilla’s leadership has put cash and coordination behind the effort; the result on the pitch and the two remaining fixtures will determine whether that mobilization pays off in LaLiga EA Sports survival.








