Yes, clearly accessibility is NOT on their priority list. WE DON’T ALL DRIVE.
It certainly was in days when rolling stock was more standardised, how else did BR manage to provide ad hoc football specials and extra capacity for summer Saturdays to seaside holiday destinations. I agree times have changed, however there are now probably more large events the railway could be serving at a profit but there isn’t the will or intelligence in the business to do so.
A few more strategically timed shortened services would fix that, it’s not necessary all day. If the game starts at 3, there’s no need to shorten services arriving at Marylebone after 1430
They are if you use one of the stations not being served. How about people going into Birmingham for work?
Or…
We could operate an inadequate service and leave people behind, or we could operate an inadequate service over part of the route and offer free parking if you'd help us out by driving the quietest bit, and we’ll conveniently forget that the people who need trains the most, those without access to their own vehicle, actually exist.
OK, I’m being provocative, but there will be people unable to access work that day, and that’s neither fair or acceptable.
Imagine it were you who was told your journey doesn’t matter, it’s just not right.
I don't necessarily think you are being provocative, but a few of these points have already been addressed.
Irrespective of this thread, a common theme of a few others in past history generally point towards the same perceived easy solutions. These can include move carriages around, get more carriages, get more drivers, retime trains and other similar answers.
But whilst there are always different options that can be changed and tweaked, these are actually quite limited.
If we take the choice of not shortening services until a certain time. The question of diagramming is what do you do with the imbalance of formations that are weighted towards a certain time slot. A consecutive run of 8-cars for a few hours, then a few 3-cars for the remainder and then what do you do with the back workings of the 3-cars when they get to the destination at the time that the longer formations needs to be returning. I'm not expecting a full train plan to be given as the answer, but I'm trying to provide some of the general principles that make it difficult to deliver and especially when you don't know which teams will be playing the game until a certain date.
The availability of resources is a fundamental part of the plan, which can make a difference given the day of the week too.
It might be desirable to plan a 20-minute frequency of 8-car trains that don't stop at the platforms or 5-car trains that do stop everywhere. Once you've got that planned around the other trains that run, do you hope that you can get the traincrew to work it?
There's a lot of thought on the topic of existing timetabled services that are cancelled because they cannot be resourced elsewhere too.
Perhaps the only satisfactory answer is to hope to provide something that isn't realistic, but where do you go from there? Is it better to try and fail or to plan to run something there's a realistic chance of delivering?