Would you drink out of a jug that has been home to bugs, barbeque sauce, corn and gallons of liquor? What if it were the Claret Jug?

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – It’s just shy of 150 years old.

It’s been bruised, battered, chipped and dented. Hundreds if not thousands have placed their lips on the rim of its silver chalice. It’s traveled the world. Been up at all hours at the ready.

And bugs, corn, ice cream, orange juice and loads of liquor have been inside.

So, the question begs, would you take a drink out of the Claret Jug?

The next person to answer that will be Sunday’s victor in the 150th playing of the Open Championship, the oldest tournament in golf. And the winner’s friends and family – and maybe even strangers – will have to make a decision.

Coming in at 21 inches tall, 5½ inches in diameter and weighing 5½ pounds, the Claret Jug – officially named Golf Champion Trophy – is one of the most coveted trophies in all of sports. Many of the names of the greatest players in the game are engraved at the bottom of the Claret Jug.

It is history.

And it just happens to be a perfect drinking mug.

Awarded to the winner for the first time in 1873 – that would have been Tom Kidd – possession of the Claret Jug has evolved, with the winner now getting to keep it for a year (it’s a full-scale replica, with the real McCoy on display in the clubhouse of the Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews).

For 100 years, it has been on vacations, posed for photos and delivered beverages.

“The first thing I drank out of it was John Smith’s Smooth Bitter,” 2007 and 2008 Open Champion Padraig Harrington said. “There have been a lot of other liquids in there. And ladybugs, too. My son wanted ladybirds (beetles) in there, so ladybirds ended up being in the Claret Jug.”

Phil Mickelson, the 2013 Open Champion, drank $40,000 wine out of it.

Stewart Cink put Guinness in for his first drink. The 2009 Open champion put a lot of other things in there, too. One Instagram post suggested OJ was filled to the rim. It was nearby when Cink was barbequing, too, and barbeque sauce eventually ended up in the jug.

Rory McIlroy, the 2014 winner, poured in some Jagermeister, a darkish, syrupy-licorice liquor. McIlroy also put in plenty of beer and wine.

And Ben Curtis isn’t quite sure what he all put in it.

“It just seemed like I was intoxicated for the first week,” Curtis said.

Three-time Open champion Tiger Woods said the Claret Jug never left his house but he did drink many different liquor out of it. Justin Leonard, 1999 winner, had his share of his mother’s tea from it.

As for food, we turn to 2015 winner Zach Johnson, who ate corn out of it. John Daly, winner in 1995, wasn’t drinking at the time, so he gulped down chocolate ice cream out of the jug,

Other players have put Champagne, Coke, Pepsi, cheap beer and wine, milk and good old-fashioned water in the Claret Jug.

But three-time Open champion Jack Nicklaus, who said holding the Claret Jug was like holding “a newborn baby,” put nothing but air in it.

“I never put anything in the Claret Jug,” he said. “I know it’s the Claret Jug, but I always thought it was disrespectful to be drinking out of it. I’ve seen guys that have done it in the past, but I always respected it. They cleaned it out before I got there, and I didn’t want to dirty it up.

“I never used the Claret Jug for anything other than what it symbolized – Champion Golfer of the Year.”

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