Top Concert Tickets


Top Sports Tickets


Top Theater Tickets


Top Indoor Venues


Top Outdoor Venues


Top Family Events

Columbus Blue Jackets Tickets

Displaying 0 Ticket Results
EventVenue NameEvent Date 
No records to display.

Looking for Columbus Blue Jackets tickets?  We offer premium and value seating for all Columbus Blue Jackets tour dates.  Click on the Columbus Blue Jackets concert schedule below to find great deals on every ticket.  Buy Columbus Blue Jackets tickets now because they are selling quickly.  Grab some friends or a sweetheart and order your tickets today!


General information about purchasing Columbus Blue Jackets tickets


All Columbus Blue Jackets tickets are side by side unless noted directly below the section and row of the specific tickets (very rare when seats are noted as not side by side). Ticket groups can be broken down into any quantity listed in the drop-down menu. Single tickets may not be available for groups of 2 or 4.

Columbus Blue Jackets tickets will be sent via FedEx once confirmed by the broker. A FedEx tracking number will be provided to you once the tickets ship.

 

Buy Columbus Blue Jackets Tickets


Stubsearch is one of the leading providers of cheap Columbus Blue Jackets tickets. We offer tickets at all price levels throughout the venue. StubSearch strives to make every transaction an excellent experience for our customers. You can be sure that your tickets will arrive to you in a timely fashion and that they are the exact tickets that you ordered.

 

Columbus Blue Jackets Tour Dates


We have tickets for every single Columbus Blue Jackets tour date. Simply click 'View Tickets' on the Columbus Blue Jackets concert schedule above to view tickets for every date on the Columbus Blue Jackets tour.

     


StubSearch Mobile Apps


 

 

Purchase Tickets Poll

How are you going to buy your tickets?

Results

    Bruins 3, Rangers 2 (OT) (The SportsXchange)

    BOSTON - Brad Marchand scored his first goal of the playoffs 15:40 into overtime to give the Boston Bruins a 3-2 victory over the New York Rangers in the first playoff game between the two old rivals in 40 years Thursday night.

     

    THN/Yahoo! NHL Awards: Best goalie, best defenseman, best defensive defenseman (The Hockey News)

    We continue rolling out the THN/Yahoo! NHL awards by announcing Sergei Bobrovsky, Ryan Suter and Francois Beauchemin as winners in today's categories

     

    Rangers' Lundqvist shuts out Caps to force Game 7 (The Associated Press)

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Home-ice advantage has held up for six games between the Washington Capitals and the New York Rangers.

     

    EA Sports NHL 14 cover vote down to 8; Pavel Datsyuk, Martin Brodeur alive (Puck Daddy)

    One of these eight players will be the cover model for EA Sports’ NHL 14: From EA Sports: The Round of 16 featured some extraordinarily close matchups and included some notable upsets: The Battle of Pennsylvania: For the second year in a row, Evgeni Malkin has been defeated by a Philadelphia Flyers player. Last year, Malkin lost to NHL 13 Cover Athlete Claude Giroux in the semifinals. This year, Flyers forward Wayne Simmonds unseeded Malkin. As Close as they Come: At final tally, less than 100 votes separated winner Taylor Hall and his opponent Matt Duchene in this round. Two Maple Leafs Advance: against Original SixTM Rivals: A strong Game Six performance may have helped Joffrey Lupul and James van Riemsdyk overcome their opponents, P.K. Subban and Tyler Seguin, respectively. Voting for this round is now live and fans can vote an unlimited number of times at NHL.com/CoverVote . The round closes on May 19 at 11:59pm ET.

     

    THN/Yahoo! NHL Awards: Most Valuable Player - Alex Ovechkin (The Hockey News)

    THN and Yahoo! teamed up to vote on a collection of awards, which we will be sharing the results of throughout this week, starting with Alex Ovechkin as MVP

     

    What We Learned: Pittsburgh Penguins have to get rid of Marc-Andre Fleury (Puck Daddy)

    Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it. One of the things people said constantly throughout the Pittsburgh Penguins' six-game series victory over the New York Islanders was that their play was well below the expected level of quality. In fact, the most common refrain was that this particular brand of awful play -- rife with defensive irresponsibility and baffling lack of execution for a team that was pretty much incredible from start to finish this year -- was probably only good enough to get them past a try-hard pretender like the Islanders. Against a real team, it was generally agreed, this kind of play would result in them losing the series in short order, probably pretty badly. But that kind of talk ignores two things. First, we were told repeatedly by just about everyone that if there was any team the Penguins, not exactly fleet-of-foot, didn't want to take on in the playoffs, it was these New York Islanders. And yeah, they had their hands full throughout, but still never really looked to be in all that much trouble; the scores were close, yes, but they still only needed six games to put these guys out of their misery. Second, and more important, is that — lo and behold — the second they took Marc-Andre Fleury out of the crease, they won both games. That's not to say that Tomas Vokoun really won them either game, because he didn't. He posted a shutout in Game 5 because almost any goaltender in the world (with at least one notable exception) would have, but he was also victimized on occasion by the bad defensive work that didn't help Fleury much either. But the fact of the matter is that if you have pretensions of winning a Stanley Cup, your goaltender has to at least be league-average. The Penguins, with their galaxy of stars and excellent coach and top-quality GM, have that goal. They do not have that goaltender. People will argue that Fleury is a winner, insofar as he won a Stanley Cup. Four years ago. Since that postseason, when he posted just a .908 save percentage and a not-good 2.61 GAA, his save percentage has crept above .899 precisely zero times. This year, when he gave up 14 goals on 128 shots in four games before Bylsma dead-bolted the door to the doghouse from the outside. Or at least, he should; there's only so many times an entire team can roll its eyes and think, "Oh no, not again," like a pot of petunias, before it's the only reasonable course of action. I don't know how much longer we need to suffer through the narrative that Fleury is any good at all before it crumbles to sand and is scattered by the wind. That is, if it hasn't done so already behind save attempts like this and this and most notably this . I mean, look, the fact of the matter is that apart from one good playoff run five years ago in which he fell a game short of winning the Stanley Cup for that not-quite-ready Penguins team, he has always been sub-average, and now things are getting markedly worse .

     

    From shutout to Game 7: No margin of error for Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist (Yahoo! Sports)

    New York Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist makes the most of the little offensive support that he receives. The latest example: a 1-0 shutout win over the Washington Capitals to force a Game 7.

     

    Lundqvist, Brassard keep Rangers alive vs. Caps (The Associated Press)

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Henrik Lundqvist slammed his stick in disgust when an overtime loss in Washington put the New York Rangers on the brink of elimination.

     

    Wild lament early exit but note improvement (The Associated Press)

    ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -- Making the playoffs for the first time in five years should count as progress. For the Minnesota Wild, that step forward wasn't firm enough.

     

    Hart Trophy Finalists: Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin vs. John Tavares (Puck Daddy)

    The NHL announced on Friday that center Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins, right wing Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals and center John Tavares of the New York Islanders are the three finalists for the 2012-13 Hart Memorial Trophy, awarded “to the player adjudged to be the most valuable to his team,” as voted on by members of the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association. This marks the first time the three Hart Finalists were first overall picks in the NHL Draft. This is also an All-Eastern Conference Hart Trophy race, which will no doubt earn criticism from the West. But Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane likely split their vote; Ryan Getzlaf didn't get the buzz he deserved; and Sergei Bobrovsky missed the playoffs. The award might come down to whether Crosby missing significant time at the end of the season is more important than Ovechkin’s iceberg-slow start for the Capitals. Then again, voters might have decided that Tavares leading the Islanders to an unlikely playoff berth, their first since 2007, is more impressive than anything Sid and Ovie accomplished. Who wins the Hart?