If you’ve spent any time on TikTok or Instagram in the last year, you’ve probably seen it: fans at baseball games crushing nine hot dogs and nine beers across nine innings, filming the whole ordeal for internet glory.
It’s called the 9-9-9 challenge, and it went from a scrappy DIY fan experience to an officially sanctioned MLB stadium food item seemingly overnight.
Here’s what the challenge is, where it came from and whether the official version lives up to the hype created online.
What Is the ‘9-9-9 Challenge?’
The 9-9-9 challenge started the way the best internet trends do — organically. It was an unofficial endurance test dreamed up by fans: eat nine hot dogs and drink nine beers (responsibly) during the course of a nine-inning game.
No branding. No corporate sponsor. Just vibes, stomach capacity and bragging rights.
Then the challenge exploded on social media, and the content practically made itself. Nine hot dogs lined up on a tray, inning-by-inning updates, the triumphant (or miserable) final bite — all of it tailor-made for reels and TikToks.
J.J. Watt Attempts the Viral ‘9-9-9 Challenge’
The moment the challenge truly crossed over? Retired NFL legend J.J. Watt attempted the challenge at a Milwaukee Brewers game last year. He completed it in just 5.5 innings.
Five and a half innings. The man speedran the 9-9-9. That Instagram reel became the kind of content that turns a niche fan dare into a mainstream cultural moment.
The lore continued when the Philadelphia Phillies debuted their version of the challenge at Citizens Bank Park during the 2025 postseason — making it one of the first clubs to bring the internet trend into the actual stadium experience.
Now the MLB Is Cashing In On the ‘9-9-9 Challenge’
On March 23, the MLB announced that it partnered with competitive eating star Joey Chestnut to make the 9-9-9 baseball challenge a reality for six MLB stadiums during the 2026 season.
The six stadiums are: Citi Field (New York Mets), Citizens Bank Park (Phillies), Coors Field (Colorado Rockies), Daikin Park (Houston Astros), Kauffman Stadium (Kansas City Royals) and Oracle Park (San Francisco Giants).
“A new season brings a chance to re-energize the fan experience, especially as we prepare for the 2026 MLB All‑Star Game in Aramark’s hometown of Philadelphia this summer,” Aramark president and CEO Alison Birdwell said.
“With that momentum in mind, our teams set out to create new culinary concepts, reimagined retail experiences, and unique in‑venue activations across our portfolio – all with a focus on amplifying what makes baseball so special and creating signature moments that fans will carry long after the final out,” she added.
The New ‘9-9-9 Baseball Challenge’ Comes With a Catch
Before you rally the group chat, know this: the official MLB version is not the same beast as the DIY original.
Instead of full-size hot dogs and beers, the new challenge consists of “nine flight-sized beers and nine mini hot dogs” and is available to “fans 21 and up with valid ID.”
The challenge costs between $54.99 and $65, plus tax and tip, depending on the stadium.
SF Gate took to X after purchasing the challenge at Oracle Park and revealed that it comes with nine glasses (an estimated 3-4 ounces) and a tall can of Coors Light.
Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough beer to fill up each glass even halfway.
So: nine tiny glasses, one tall can, and a price tag pushing $65 before tip. The aesthetic of nine glasses on a tray is undeniably shareable, but fans expecting the full-send energy of the original internet version might find the official rollout a little underwhelming.
The 9-9-9 baseball challenge started as pure fan culture — no permission needed, no corporate tie-in, just a ridiculous personal challenge and a phone camera.
Now it’s a branded stadium activation with flight-sized portions and a Joey Chestnut partnership.
Whether that’s a cool evolution or a watered-down cash grab probably depends on how full those nine glasses are.
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