- Brendan Fevola leaves Andy Murray stunned on live radio
- Tennis legend wasn’t sure if AFL great was joking or not
AFL great Brendan Fevola has left tennis legend Andy Murray speechless after revealing his absolutely staggering Uber Eats bill.
The Carlton goalkicking icon is focusing on his health and fitness these days, but has admitted to having a problem with ordering take away food which saw him splashing out on the food delivery service up to four times a day.
While interviewing Murray on The Fox’s Fifi, Fev & Nick, Fevola disclosed that that he once spent an astonishing $36,000 on Uber Eats in a single year.
‘I want to tell you a little stat. I order Uber Eats all the time… we sent a letter to Uber Eats to see where we rank [nationwide] in a year,’ Fevola told Murray.
‘Fi [Fifi Box] had spent about $3,500 AUD… and I was ranked in the top 0.001% of Australians. I was pretty much the number one Uber Eats [customer].’
Murray was stunned by the confession.
Brendan Fevola has left Andy Murray stunned after revealing his bonkers Uber Eats bill
Fevola told Murray he’d spent $36,000 on Uber Eats in a single year
‘You should get knighted,’ he said.
Fevola then informed the tennis champion he’d spent $36,000 on Uber Eats a year.
‘This is genuine?’ asked Murray.
Fevola replied: ‘This is fair dinkum, yeah.’
Murray was intrigued and wanted to know how the former athlete was splashing out so much cash.
‘Yeah, breakfast, lunch… and so, dinner, because Uber Eats is so good,’ explained Fevola.
‘I don’t know what to choose so if I want a steak, a chicken Parma, some dumplings… I just order all three and just nibble at them all.’
In 2020, Fevola revealed that his partner Alex is now in control over what he orders online.
The former footy star says at one point he was ordering food up to four times a day
‘We get home at a certain time and I get hungry and you just eat and you eat,’ he said at the time.
‘I was ordering Uber Eats, this is no word of a lie, a minimum of twice a day, sometimes up to four times because you order it to work.’
‘When you get home, then you have another snack, and then you might order dessert, then you order dinner.’
Describing himself as ‘old school’, Brendan now drives to the takeaway store in he feels like ordering in.