
US Open food and drink prices revealed as golf fans fume at ‘disgrace' of a menu and staggering cost of WATER
GOLF fans fumed at the "disgrace" of a menu at the US Open.
Advertisement
3
Rory Mcllroy looks to add to his Masters win at the US Open
Credit: Shutterstock Editorial
3
Fans fumed at the menu prices
Credit: X formerly Twitter / @NUCLRGOLF
And fans were stunned to see just how much a bite to eat could set them back.
A Philly cheesesteak was the heftiest meal on the menu - costing $13.95 (£10.33) - while crisps were $3.49 (£2.58).
A single Corona costs $11.95 (£8.85) - despite being able to buy a four-pack for £6 at Sainsbury's.
Even a bottle of water is $4.95 (£3.66) - but what really did it for fans was the $1.95 (£1.44) price of a banana.
Advertisement
READ MORE IN GOLF
One raged: "$1.98 for a banana??? I'm taking my business elsewhere!"
Another fumed: "$1.95 for a banana is outrageous."
One said: "$2 for a banana is crazy. Can get a bundle at the store for under $2!!! I am irate."
Another added: "$5 for a water…"
Advertisement
Most read in Golf
CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS
On the course, American Bryson DeChambeau looks to retain his US Open title but
Scottie Scheffler also
Inside Bryson DeChambeau's US Open preparation with 'fun side quests' on helicopter and racing Indy500 cars
Elsewhere, fighting tooth and nail to make a name for himself in Pennsylvania
Advertisement
Vogt - who runs his own dentistry practice in Indianapolis - is 1,173rd in the World Amateur Rankings but secured a debut place at a major.
Not only does he hope his golf career will take off but also his dentistry business, revealing: "I think they've gotten a ton of enquiries.
"I've got such a great team, I've got friends helping me out with all those messages and enquiries and said, 'hey, guys, forward those to Chris, my buddy, and make sure you stay focused on patients because that's what we're there to do in McCordsville, Indiana'.
"It's been a lot of fun, some patients reaching out and fellow dentists. I feel like there are so many people behind me this week - Oakmont, Pittsburgh, dentistry - it's been fun.
Advertisement
"Honestly, from a business perspective, that's not what it's about. We try to take good care of people, and if it brings us more great patients that we can help, awesome.
"It will give us something to talk about maybe in and around the office."
3
Matt Vogt is a full-time dentist-turned US Open star
Credit: INSTAGRAM @thedentistsatgc
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
4 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Scheffler and Rahm focussed on fairway finding at Oakmont
The Spanish star, champion at Torrey Pines in 2021, is fully aware that the feared Pittsburgh venue has produced a slew of power-hitting winners. But he also knows power without control won't cut it this week. "Length in a major like this, and even now in general in any sport, having that power is always helpful," he said of winners like Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Ernie Els, Angel Cabrera and Dustin Johnson. "I would like to guess that that week their driving was very much on point. I think it's obviously nearly impossible to win a tournament here if you're not hitting it well off the tee because, if you keep putting yourself off the fairway, for lack of a better term, you're not going to get Oakmont very often." Big-hitting DeChambeau destroyed Winged Foot playing bomb and gouge golf in 2020 before winning again last year despite late fairway misses at Pinehurst No 2. But world number one and title favourite Scheffler agreed with Rahm that fairway finding is going to be key this week. "This golf course, there are not many trees out there, but there are so many bunkers; I don't really know if this is a golf course you can necessarily just overpower with kind of a bomb and gouge type strategy, especially with the way the rough is," Scheffler said. "You have to play the angles. Some of the greens are elevated, other ones are pitched extremely away from you. "There's not really many areas where you step on the tee box and you're like, hey, I can miss it right here, hey, I can shade towards the left side of the fairway because right is really bad. "Actually, if you hit it in the right rough, you're probably not going to get it to the green; if you hit it in the left rough, you're probably not going to get it to the green. So might as well try and split the difference there and hit it in the middle." ADVERTISEMENT DeChambeau has a new set of innovative irons in the bag this week and may use the driver sparingly. But he insisted he won't be afraid to let loose with his biggest weapon. "Can I be fearless on this golf course? Well, yeah, anybody really can," DeChambeau said. "Are there times to be more reserved, depending on wind locations, softness of greens, pin locations, you name it, very strategic. "It's not like every single hole is Winged Foot out here. You can't just bomb it on every single hole and blast over bunkers and have a wedge run up to the front of the green. You can on a lot of the holes but not on every one of them. "I think this golf course, you have to be just a fraction more strategic, especially with the rough is so long. I'm going to be as fearless as I can possibly be out there; I know that." Rahm was the low amateur on his US Open debut at Oakmont in 2016 and while Johnson won on four-under that week, he senses that an over-par score could get the job done in a week when mental toughness will be the deciding factor. "It's just a tough course," said Rahm, who put Scheffler under pressure in the final round of the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow but failed to press on down the stretch and ended up tied for eighth. "It's so difficult where very few times anybody has won under par. If it doesn't rain, most likely, over par will win again. "It's something that none of us, I would say, are used to, but it's a challenge you need to embrace. "If there's any part of your game that will be tested on a week like this, it will be your mental game, that's for sure."

The 42
5 hours ago
- The 42
McIlroy optimistic he has addressed driver problems ahead of US Open
RORY MCILROY SAYS his swing and driver struggles over the past month have improved as he prepares to challenge intimidating Oakmont in this week's 125th US Open. McIlroy won the Masters in April to complete a career Grand Slam, a trek the 36-year-old began with his first major triumph at the 2011 US Open at Congressional. The five-time major winner had his driver test non-conforming to golf rules before the PGA Championship and has struggled since to find a comfortable replacement, missing the cut in last week's Canadian Open. 'I feel a little better with the driver over the weekend at home and even today playing a practice round, so hopefully I can hit a few more fairways than I have been hitting and give myself some opportunities,' McIlroy said Tuesday. McIlroy had been testing several different drivers to find one that matched the feel of the familiar one he had worn down until it was done, and he was fighting swing issues. 'Hitting a lot of drivers. Every driver sort of has its own character and you're trying to manage the misses. It's definitely a little bit of both,' he said. 'I think I learned a lot on Thursday and Friday last week and did a good bit of practice at home and feel like I'm in a better place with everything going into this week.' Advertisement Asked what he learned, McIlroy replied, 'I learned that I wasn't using the right driver.' McIlroy didn't have a top driver at the PGA Championship but noted that top-ranked Scottie Scheffler, the PGA winner, said after the win his driver had also failed a pre-event test. 'It wasn't a big deal for Scottie,' McIlroy said. 'So it shouldn't have been a big deal for me.' The big deal before him this week is one of golf's toughest tests at Oakmont, with dense rough, fast sloping greens and abundant bunkers. McIlroy played a practice round last week at Oakmont and marveled at how tough the course played. 'You hit a ball off the fairway and you were looking for a good couple of minutes just to find it,' McIlroy said. 'It's very penal if you miss. Sometimes it's penal if you don't miss. 'The person with the most patience and the best attitude this week is the one that's going to win.' As for his round, McIlroy added: 'I birdied the last two holes for 81. It didn't feel like I played that bad.' McIlroy starts off the 10th tee at 12.40pm Irish time on Thursday alongside Shane Lowry and England's Justin Rose. McIlroy has managed six consecutive top-10 US Open finishes, including a 2023 runner-up effort to winner Wyndham Clark and a second-place showing last year after his bogeys on three of the last four holes left Bryson DeChambeau the winner. His US Open run coincided with a change in approach about the majors. 'I made the decision at that back end of 2018 into 2019, I wanted to try to build my game around the toughest tests that we have in the game,' McIlroy said. 'The US Open went from probably my least favorite major to probably my favorite because of what it asks from you, and I love that challenge.' McIlroy won at Pebble Beach and the Players Championship before beating Rose in a playoff to make his green jacket breakthrough at Augusta National, a win he's still trying to get past. 'You dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don't think about what comes next,' McIlroy said. 'Chasing a certain goal for the better part of a decade and a half, I think I'm allowed a little bit of time to relax a little bit. But here at Oakmont, I certainly can't relax this week.'


RTÉ News
5 hours ago
- RTÉ News
'I need to get my stuff together' – Rory McIlroy out to end Masters hangover
Rory McIlroy says he has to "get his stuff together" as he looks to shake off his Masters hangover at the US Open this week. The world number two completed an 11-year quest to win all four majors when he triumphed at Augusta National in April but his form has suffered since. He tied for 47th at the PGA Championship last month, where he suffered drama when his driver was found to be non-conforming, while he missed the cut at the Canadian Open last week as his struggles off the tee continued. The Irish golfer has cut himself some slack given his monumental achievement at the Masters. However, ahead of the US Open at unforgiving Oakmont this week, where he will play alongside Shane Lowry for the opneing two rounds, he knows he has to get his head back in the game. Asked if he knew how tough it would be to regain his motivation, he said: "I didn't know. Look, you dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don't think about what comes next. "I think I've always been a player who struggles to play after a big event, after I win whatever tournament. "I always struggle to show up with motivation the next week because you've just accomplished something and you want to enjoy it and you want to sort of relish the fact that you've achieved a goal. "I think chasing a certain goal for the better part of a decade and a half, I think I'm allowed a little bit of time to relax a little bit. "I think it's trying to have a little bit of amnesia and forget about what happened six weeks ago. Then just trying to find the motivation to go back out there and work as hard as I've been working. "But at the same time, you have to enjoy what you've just accomplished. I certainly feel like I'm still doing that and I will continue to do that. "At some point, you have to realise that there's a little bit more golf left to play this season: here, Portrush (the Open), Ryder Cup, so those are obviously the three big things that I'm sort of looking at for the rest of the year. "I sort of need to get my stuff together here and get back to the process of what I'd been doing for that seven months from October last year until April this year." After missing the cut in Toronto last week, McIlroy said he had "concerns" about his driving coming into a tournament where hitting the fairways will be key to success. The 2011 US Open champion, who has finished second in the tournament in each of the last two years, spent the weekend practising with a new driver and says he is feeling more confident. "I feel like, as the last few weeks go, I think I learnt a lot on Thursday and Friday last week and did a good bit of practice at home and feel like I'm in a better place with everything going into this week," he said.