The Day

Open tickets draw high asking price on secondary market

- By NEIL BEST

Getting to Eastern Long Island can be a hassle, given the crowds and traffic on a narrow piece of land far from the area's population center. But that has not kept golf fans from making the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills a tough ticket.

Packages for the four-day competitio­n portion of the week Thursday through Sunday are sold out, but they can be had on the secondary market — for a steep price — either on a daily basis or for all four days.

According to TicketIQ, which monitors resale market sites, as of Monday the average asking price for each of the four days was $265, which is 60 percent more than last year at Erin Hills and 34 percent more than 2016 at Oakmont.

The only more expensive Open asking prices this decade were at Merion in 2013, which averaged $280.

TicketIQ's average asking price for Thursday's first round was $175 (with a low of $71) and rose from there to $246 (with a low of $115) on Friday and $339 (with a low of $175) on Saturday. The asking price for Sunday's final round averaged $302, with a low of $93.

This is the first Open held on Long Island since 2009 and the first at Shinnecock since 2004.

It also is the first time Tiger Woods will compete since he missed the cut at the 2015 Open.

Vivid Seats, another secondary ticket marketplac­e, said its data indicates the 2018 Open is the costliest since 2015.

Based on tickets actually sold, not asking prices, as of Monday the average was $111, compared to $97 in 2017 and $101 in 2016, as of this time in Open week. The 2015 Open at Chambers Bay averaged $196.

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