When England’s World Cup contingent arrived in Dallas, the first thing that caught their attention was not the stadium atmosphere but the price tag attached to a simple pint of beer.
A 16‑ounce draft that would barely fetch a few pounds back home was listed at $15.95 before tax, a figure that felt more like a surcharge than a beverage.
A warning from the stands
Journalist Henry Winter posted the concession board on X, flagging the cost as a heads‑up for traveling supporters who might otherwise be taken by surprise.
The price was not an isolated case; a bottle of water commanded $8.25, and several snack items climbed into the double digits, turning a routine match‑day snack into a budgeting exercise.
Fans responded with a mix of resignation and outrage, one quipping that the cost was comparable to the airfare to get there, while another joked about the extra tip that would inevitably be added.
A cultural contrast in sport
The steep fees underscored a broader disparity between the sporting economies of the United States and the United Kingdom, where match‑day pricing has long been a familiar, albeit pricey, tradition.
For many English fans, the experience served as a reminder that the business model behind American stadiums operates on a different set of expectations, one that can turn a simple drink into a talking point long after the final whistle.