Current:Home > Finance2026 World Cup final will be played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey -Visionary Wealth Guides
2026 World Cup final will be played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey
View
Date:2025-04-13 20:41:12
The 2026 World Cup final will be played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, beating out Texas and California for soccer’s showcase game.
FIFA awarded the July 19 championship to the $1.6 billion venue, which opened in 2010, the culminating match of an expanded 48-nation, 104-game tournament that will be spread across three nations for the first time.
Located about 10 miles from Manhattan, MetLife was promoted by both New York and New Jersey, where the stadium was built in the Meadowlands marshes. The land of Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi and Frank Sinatra will be the focal point of the globe on that Sunday, when either Lionel Messi’s Argentina will try to win its second straight title or a successor will emerge.
“It will be a celebration of our diversity and our values,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said in a telephone interview. “The bigger picture is what leads up to it and what we leave behind for the decades to come.”
FIFA made the announcement Sunday at a Miami television studio, allocating the opener of the 39-day tournament to Mexico City’s Estadio Azteca on June 11 and the finale to the home of the NFL’s New York Jets and Giants.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones had lobbied for the final to be at his AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
“The competition was dealing with the perception of the coastal, of a New York, or a Los Angeles,” he said. “If this were totally being played to just America and the United States, that wouldn’t have been such a formidable thing to overcome. But internationally, that’s formidable to overcome.”
All games from the quarterfinals on are being played in the United States. Semifinals are on July 14 at AT&T Stadium and the following day at Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
Quarterfinals are at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on July 9, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, the following day, and at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, and Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, on July 11. The third-place game will be at Hard Rock on July 18.
The U.S. team will train in suburban Atlanta ahead of the tournament and open at SoFi on June 12. The Americans play seven days later at Seattle’s Lumen Field and finish the group stage at SoFi on June 25.
Since reaching the semifinals of the first World Cup in 1930, the U.S. has advanced to the quarterfinals just once, in 2002.
Seventy-eight of 104 matches will be played in the U.S., with 13 games each in Mexico and Canada, and there as many as six matches a day.
“It’s about making our nation proud,” American coach Gregg Berhalter said. “One way to really grow the game and to change soccer in America forever is to perform well and do something that no U.S. team has ever done before.”
AT&T will host a tournament-high nine matches. There will be eight each at MetLife, SoFi and Mercedes Benz; seven apiece at Hard Rock, Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, and NRG Stadium in Houston; and six apiece at Lumen, Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, and Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.
FIFA officials did not publicly explain their site-decision process.
Philadelphia’s final match will be a round-of-16 meeting on July 4, the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Philadelphia’s Citizens Bank Park hosts baseball’s All-Star Game, likely on July 14.
Santa Clara is the only U.S. site that will not host a game after the new round of 32. AT&T will host two round-of-32 matches.
FIFA expanded the World Cup from 32 to 48 nations, increased matches from 64 and announced the 16 sites in 2022.
Murphy learned of the decision while at a watch party in a MetLife Stadium suite. He was not discouraged by a British tabloid report on Jan. 17 that said the final would be at AT&T.
“We did everything we could to put our head downs, focus on the job at hand, kind of push out the noise, and that turned out to be a winning formula,” Murphy said.
Mexico will play its second match at Estadio BBVA in Monterrey on June 18 and return to Azteca on June 24. Mexico City will host five matches, with four each in Monterrey and Guadalajara’s Estadio Akron.
Canada will play its opening first-round match in Toronto on June 12, then at B.C. Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, on June 18 and 24. Each Canada venue will host 13 games.
A nation will need to play eight matches to win the title, up from seven since 1982.
All 11 of the U.S. stadiums are home to NFL teams. Hard Rock will host this year’s Copa América final on July 14, while MetLife was the site of the 2016 Copa América final.
Both the 1970 and 1986 World Cup finals were at Azteca.
When the U.S. hosted the 24-nation, 52-game tournament in 1994, the final was at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, the opener at Chicago’s Soldier Field and the semifinals at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford and the Rose Bowl.
With the additional teams, the length of the tournament will grow from 29 days in the shortened 2022 schedule in Qatar and 32 days for the 2018 tournament in Russia.
Only one match will involve a team that has not had at least three off days. FIFA divided the group stage into East, Central and West regions and intended to make travel shorter for group winners.
The stadiums in Arlington, Atlanta and Houston have retractable roofs that are expected to be closed because of summer heat, and Inglewood and Vancouver have fixed roofs.
Artificial turf will be replaced by grass in Arlington, Atlanta, East Rutherford, Foxborough, Houston, Inglewood and Vancouver.
Several of the venues are expected to widen their surfaces to accommodate a 75-by-115 yard (68-by-105 meter) playing field, including SoFi, AT&T and MetLife.
___
AP Sports Writer Schuyler Dixon in Arlington, Texas, contributed to this report.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
veryGood! (32624)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Broken wings: Complaints about U.S. airlines soared again this year
- Finland to close again entire border with Russia as reopening of 2 crossing points lures migrants
- Paris Saint-Germain advances in tense finish to Champions League group. Porto also into round of 16
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- The European Union is sorely tested to keep its promises to Ukraine intact
- These 50 Top-Rated Amazon Gifts for Women With Thousands of 5-Star Reviews Will Arrive By Christmas
- In 'The Boy and the Heron,' Hayao Miyazaki looks back
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Hiker rescued after falling 1,000 feet from Hawaii trail, surviving for 3 days
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Why '90s ads are unforgettable
- Naval officer jailed in Japan in deadly crash is transferred to US custody, his family says
- The Scarf Jacket Is Winter’s Most Viral Trend, Get It for $27 With These Steals from Amazon and More
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Endangered whale filmed swimming with beachgoers dies after stranding on sandbar
- Albanian opposition disrupts parliament as migration deal with Italy taken off the agenda
- Guyana and Venezuela leaders meet face-to-face as region pushes to defuse territorial dispute
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Who are the Von Erich brothers? What to know about 'The Iron Claw's devastating subject
Far-right Polish lawmaker Grzegorz Braun douses menorah in parliament
Thieves argued they should face lesser charge because their stolen goods were on sale
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Academic arrested in Norway as a Moscow spy confirms his real, Russian name, officials say
Federal Reserve leaves interest rate unchanged, but hints at cuts for 2024
CBS News poll analysis: Some Democrats don't want Biden to run again. Why not?