Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Soccer Capital of America Is Now the Soccer Capital of the World

Argentina, England, the Netherlands, and Algeria are all living and training in or near Kansas City during the World Cup.

REUTERS/Claudia Greco

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Of the 11 U.S. metropolitan areas hosting the World Cup this summer, Kansas City is easily the smallest.

But it’s punching above its weight in this tournament. Four teams chose to make the region their home away from home during the tournament, and the Netherlands and Argentina are playing group-stage games here.

Kansas City is no stranger to soccer. The city calls itself the “Soccer Capital of America,” a phrase trademarked by MLS’s Sporting Kansas City a decade ago. Its NWSL team, the KC Current, opened the first U.S. stadium built for a women’s professional sports team in 2024. Even the titular character from the beloved soccer show Ted Lasso and the actor who portrays him are from the area.

The city held its first match of the tournament between Argentina and Algeria on Tuesday night. Lionel Messi scored his first World Cup hat trick at the Chiefs’ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, a historic feat in a venue that will soon be abandoned as the NFL team moves across state lines to a $3 billion dome.

Base Camp Capital

Four teams chose Kansas City for their base camp: Argentina, England, the Netherlands—three of the world’s best teams—and Algeria.

The Dutch are at the training center of the NWSL’s KC Current. The Argentines went to Sporting KC’s training center. Algeria chose the University of Kansas, about a 45-minute drive from downtown in Lawrence, Kansas. Kramer says she got a call that England wanted to go outside FIFA’s official list to stay in Kansas City. The team is based at Swope Soccer Village, a facility owned by the city and managed by Sporting KC.

The Current have been on a building boom, and team owner Chris Long tells Front Office Sports the team got involved in the World Cup bidding process early in its own construction process. He says the team toured FIFA shortly after breaking ground on the training facility, and sent stadium renderings to FIFA and Concacaf to let them know what would be coming. About a dozen teams toured the facility for a base camp, he says, and with the Netherlands coming, the team spent $52 million to build another facility and 2,000-seat stadium next door so that the NWSL squad can use it to train while the Dutch are in town.

“There’s no question that the Netherlands selecting it is a huge validation in what we’re doing,” Long says. “I think when you add in all the intangibles, they more than offset the hard cost of it, which on its own wouldn’t make sense.”

And it’s impossible to tell the story of the World Cup coming to Kansas City without mentioning the unlikely pairing of the Algerian National Team and Lawrence.

The Kansas City region is already home to thousands of Algerians, and the college town has embraced the team and its fans. A local artist created a giant piece of the Algerian flag, and the University of Kansas band learned the national anthem. The Lawrence Public Library is showing Algerian films, holding Arabic for Beginners courses, and offering Afrobeats dance classes for kids. “Rock Chalk, Algeria!” instantly became a tagline for the viral bond between the two.

The team has embraced Lawrence right back. The players tried their hand at basketball and American football, and kicked the soccer ball around with local children

“It’s great,” Algeria’s Ibrahim Maza said in response to a question about Lawrence from FOS after Tuesday’s match. “Everything, the training facilities, you know. It’s top. We have everything. And yeah, just great support. Thank you, thank you to them.”

Algeria is the only team with two matches scheduled in Kansas City during the group stage. The team faces Jordan in San Francisco before returning to play Austria.

“I hope from a footballing standpoint as well that we can also make it through to the knockout stage and then maybe everyone from Kansas can travel with us to another city,” Algeria coach Vladimir Petković said in his pre-match press conference Monday.

Transit Woes

Like Dallas and Miami, Kansas City is one of the host cities that doesn’t have robust public transportation to the stadium. The host committee responded by selling $15 tickets for shuttle buses from a number of points around the city, including from the free Fan Fest.

But ahead of Tuesday’s match, the lines to get on those buses were incredibly long. Two fans from Colorado who had pre-purchased bus tickets shared a photo with FOS from the bus line at the Fan Fest, and said they only moved about 10 feet in an hour before ditching the ordeal for a rideshare. Analyst Jordan Angeli shared a similar experience on social media, calling the operation “pathetic.”

The traffic to Arrowhead Stadium was also brutal. The typical 20-minute ride from downtown took more than 90 minutes on the media shuttle. A local writer told FOS their trip was three hours. Fans were still making their way into the stadium around kickoff.

Kansas City’s host committee blamed FIFA for delays getting to the stadium.

“While the day was an extraordinary success overall, we recognize that some fans experienced significant delays entering the stadium complex and understand the frustration that created,” the host committee said in a statement Wednesday evening. “Transportation systems successfully moved fans throughout the region and to the stadium area.

“The primary challenge occurred at stadium entry, where operational constraints created congestion that affected all modes of transportation arriving at the venue. While decisions regarding stadium entry operations primarily rest with FIFA, based on yesterday’s experience, KC2026 and its partners have provided specific recommendations to improve operations ahead of Saturday’s match.”

FIFA responded in a statement late Wednesday: “FIFA and organisers will continue to work closely together to ensure that lessons related to traffic and transportation coordinated with local partners and access to the stadium precinct are learned ahead of the next matches and reiterate the request for fans to arrive early and enjoy the complete fan stadium programming.”

Once fans got inside, the atmosphere was special.

“I love soccer,” Kansas City local Kaitlyn told FOS at the match. “I don’t feel like we have it here, like this, in the United States. Kansas City, I think, is the closest you can get to that, but it’s been just amazing to experience the culture.”

The Business Side

Fundraising was a challenge for many of the host cities due to a combination of FIFA’s restrictions around unofficial partners and varying state funding. Host committee CEO Pam Kramer credits the area’s four professional sports teams—the Chiefs, Royals, and the two soccer clubs—for helping the host committee get on good financial footing.

“We’ve heard all of the constraints around fundraising,” Kramer told FOS on Tuesday. “I think we’ve been in a better position from the start because of what we call our founding funders, the four teams.”

The host committee received public dollars from both states, the city, and Johnson County, Kansas, as well as a number of corporate sponsors—both household names including Hallmark and less consumer-facing brands like JE Dunn. Many of those brands were on display at the city’s enormous Fan Fest, which is running for 18 days of the tournament. Kramer also touts Chiefs owner Clark Hunt, who owns MLS’s FC Dallas and whose father was one of the soccer league’s founders, for helping to rally the local business community.

REUTERS/Doug Barrett

As it’s hosting some of the biggest tournaments in the world, the city is also focused on how the World Cup can propel Kansas City forward. The host committee built a business meeting spot for the tournament called KCHouse, and has been working with the embassies to connect with C-suite executives traveling in for matches. Kramer said they had a “packed house” for a Monday roundtable on the business of agriculture.

“We attract people because of sports,” Kramer said. “And if we can turn that into people want to live here, people want to start a business, locate a second headquarters, whatever, I think those are the real opportunities.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

The USMNT Failed to Meet the Moment. Seattle Did Not

Seattle put on a show for the World Cup knockout match.
First at FOS

FIFA Quietly Suspended U.S. Soccer Officials Before Belgium Match

U.S. Soccer confirmed the suspensions but did not comment.
Jun 25, 2023; Harrison, New Jersey, USA; Carli Lloyd before the game between the Chicago Red Stars and NJ/NY Gotham FC at Red Bull Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Schneidler-USA TODAY Sports

Carli Lloyd Didn’t Pull Punches After USMNT World Cup Exit

Lloyd said Team USA played “scared” during its loss to Belgium.
Jul 5, 2026; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Norway forward Erling Haaland (9) scores his teams second goal of the match against Brazil during a Round of 16 match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup at New York New Jersey Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Bidding for Next World Cup Rights Could Start at $1B

Fox paid $485 million for the rights to the 2026 World Cup.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

7/8/26 – USMNT Ratings, World Cup Bidding War, Big 12’s Monster Deal

0:00

Featured Today

ATLANTA, GA - September 05: Georgia Lottery fireworks after the game against the Seattle Mariners at Truist Park on Friday, September 5, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Inside the Spectacle and Science of MLB Fireworks

Postgame fireworks are lighting up baseball for America250.
Kansas City Chiefs
July 1, 2026

NFL Teams Push to Turn Futbol Fans Into Football Devotees

NFL teams are courting international soccer fans during their World Cup visits.
June 26, 2026

What We Saw Traveling the U.S. for the World Cup Group Stage

The knockout stage begins Sunday.
June 26, 2026

In an Era of $1,000 Tickets, $10 Watch Parties Bring Fans Together

Stadium watch parties now rival home-game experiences.
June 25, 2026

Italian Americans Have Severe World Cup FOMO

Bars and restaurants in Boston, Philly, and beyond are missing the Azzurri.
July 6, 2026; Seattle, Washington, U.S.; Christian Pulisic and Max Arfsten of the U.S. look dejected as they embrace after the match following their elimination from the World Cup. Mandatory Credit: Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

Fox, Telemundo Still Win Big Despite USMNT, Mexico World Cup Exits

Both the USMNT and Mexico were eliminated in the round of 16.
July 6, 2026

World Cup Is Drawing NFL Playoff Audiences

Fox and Telemundo set more milestones during last week’s U.S. win.
July 6, 2026

U.S. Gets Reality Check With World Cup Knockout By Belgium

Belgium thoroughly routed the USMNT in Seattle.
Sponsored

Josh Childress: Why Now Is the Time for NBA Expansion

Josh Childress on why he invested in the Portland Thorns, the case for NBA expansion, and donating to Stanford NIL.
July 6, 2026

USMNT World Cup Run Boosts ‘Country Roads’ Streams

Inside the business behind the World Cup singalong.
July 6, 2026

Everything You Need to Know About the Trump-FIFA-Balogun Mess

Balogun will play in the USMNT’s World Cup game Monday night.
July 1, 2026; Santa Clara, California, U.S.; Folarin Balogun of the U.S. celebrates scoring their first goal. Mandatory Credit: Phil Noble-Reuters via Imagn Images
Opinion
July 6, 2026

Hot Takes on Folarin Balogun Red-Card Appeal Miss the Mark

FIFA has confirmed Balogun will be eligible to play on Monday.
July 5, 2026

USMNT’s World Cup Run Is Turning Pochettino’s Plain Blue Shirt Into a Hit

One shirt has become an unlikely World Cup bestseller.