📂 Categoría: Football,World Cup | 📅 Fecha: 1782724195
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The city of Boston have made a decision that directly goes against FIFA’s requirements as a host city.
FIFA mandates that host cities must organize and run fan festivals for every single match of the tournament.
It’s one of the many reasons why Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, widely regarded as one of the best venues in the U.S., didn’t end up as a host city.
Despite having two more World Cup matches to be play at the Boston Stadium, the city have closed their fan festival.
“Throughout the Group Stage matches, fans from around the world came together in the heart of Boston to celebrate the FIFA World Cup 2026,” a statement from the city read.
“Proving once again that the beautiful game has the power to unite people across cultures, languages, and borders.
“By the numbers: More than 155,000 fans from 108+ countries, 43 live matches, 109 goals scored and one unforgettable FIFA Fan Festival™ Boston.
“We would like to thank everyone for bringing the energy and passion. It was all we had hoped for and so much more.
“This chapter may be over, but the FIFA World Cup 2026 journey isn’t!”
It’s a decision that has ruffled feathers amongst people in the city.
“For a hosting city, it’s all so lame, other cities are doing 30-40,000 people in the Fan Zone,” one said.
“It’s ridiculous especially in a city that thrives on “playoff” culture. It literally gets better in the knockouts,” a second added.
“Are these organized by people who have never watched soccer? I get we all have go to work in the morning as usual, but having the World Cup so close by is a once-in-lifetime opportunity that I want to take advantage of,” a third commented.
Despite demanding the official fan zones, FIFA provide little financial support to actually run them.
The global governing body retains the primary revenue streams such as the sponsorships, merchandise sales and media broadcast rights.
This leaves local taxpayers and host committies to foot the daily operational bill, which is approximately $1 million a day, according to Fortune.
It is a figure so high that Boston cut its festival to 16 days, which is less than half the tournament – and they aren’t the only ones to have altered initial plans.
New Jersey canceled its initial single-site festival at Liberty State Park, instead pivoting to a series of smaller community events, backed by $5 million in economic development funds.
Toronto and Los Angeles began charging entrance fees, ranging from between $10 to $120+ depending on availability to recoup millions in unexpected shortfalls.
Boston have been one of the most talked about host cities this tournament, thanks to Scotland’s Tartan Army.
Tens of thousands of passionate Scotland fans have travelled across the pond to back Steve Clarke‘s men in their first World Cup appearance in 28 years.
Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 at Boston Stadium – home of the New England Patriots – before losing their next two games and being eliminated from the tournament.
The Tartan Army took over Fenway Park, home of MLB‘s Boston Red Sox and arguably the most iconic venue in baseball.
Scotland fans also drank the city dry with bars scrambling to order emergency deliveries to keep up with the demand, while Patriots have engaged in talks about taking the NFL to Scotland.
While the central party at City Hall Plaza has wrapped up to mitigate municipal costs, the tournament infrastructure remains highly active.
It will play host to Germany – Paraguay in the Round of 32 on 29 June, and then a quarterfinal match.
Stay up to date with the World Cup across all our talkSPORT platforms – subscribe to our YouTube channel for the latest news, opinion, exclusive interviews and our daily unfiltered, unscripted show ‘The S* Word, from 8am ET
The city of Boston have made a decision that directly goes against FIFA’s requirements as a host city.
FIFA mandates that host cities must organize and run fan festivals for every single match of the tournament.
It’s one of the many reasons why Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, widely regarded as one of the best venues in the U.S., didn’t end up as a host city.
Despite having two more World Cup matches to be play at the Boston Stadium, the city have closed their fan festival.
“Throughout the Group Stage matches, fans from around the world came together in the heart of Boston to celebrate the FIFA World Cup 2026,” a statement from the city read.
“Proving once again that the beautiful game has the power to unite people across cultures, languages, and borders.
“By the numbers: More than 155,000 fans from 108+ countries, 43 live matches, 109 goals scored and one unforgettable FIFA Fan Festival™ Boston.
“We would like to thank everyone for bringing the energy and passion. It was all we had hoped for and so much more.
“This chapter may be over, but the FIFA World Cup 2026 journey isn’t!”
It’s a decision that has ruffled feathers amongst people in the city.
“For a hosting city, it’s all so lame, other cities are doing 30-40,000 people in the Fan Zone,” one said.
“It’s ridiculous especially in a city that thrives on “playoff” culture. It literally gets better in the knockouts,” a second added.
“Are these organized by people who have never watched soccer? I get we all have go to work in the morning as usual, but having the World Cup so close by is a once-in-lifetime opportunity that I want to take advantage of,” a third commented.
Despite demanding the official fan zones, FIFA provide little financial support to actually run them.
The global governing body retains the primary revenue streams such as the sponsorships, merchandise sales and media broadcast rights.
This leaves local taxpayers and host committies to foot the daily operational bill, which is approximately $1 million a day, according to Fortune.
It is a figure so high that Boston cut its festival to 16 days, which is less than half the tournament – and they aren’t the only ones to have altered initial plans.
New Jersey canceled its initial single-site festival at Liberty State Park, instead pivoting to a series of smaller community events, backed by $5 million in economic development funds.
Toronto and Los Angeles began charging entrance fees, ranging from between $10 to $120+ depending on availability to recoup millions in unexpected shortfalls.
Boston have been one of the most talked about host cities this tournament, thanks to Scotland’s Tartan Army.
Tens of thousands of passionate Scotland fans have travelled across the pond to back Steve Clarke‘s men in their first World Cup appearance in 28 years.
Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 at Boston Stadium – home of the New England Patriots – before losing their next two games and being eliminated from the tournament.
The Tartan Army took over Fenway Park, home of MLB‘s Boston Red Sox and arguably the most iconic venue in baseball.
Scotland fans also drank the city dry with bars scrambling to order emergency deliveries to keep up with the demand, while Patriots have engaged in talks about taking the NFL to Scotland.
While the central party at City Hall Plaza has wrapped up to mitigate municipal costs, the tournament infrastructure remains highly active.
It will play host to Germany – Paraguay in the Round of 32 on 29 June, and then a quarterfinal match.
Stay up to date with the World Cup across all our talkSPORT platforms – subscribe to our YouTube channel for the latest news, opinion, exclusive interviews and our daily unfiltered, unscripted show ‘The S* Word, from 8am ET
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- Este artículo cubre aspectos importantes sobre Football,World Cup
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📚 Información de la Fuente
| 📰 Publicación: | talksport.com |
| ✍️ Autor: | Alex Worth |
| 📅 Fecha Original: | 2026-06-29 08:57:00 |
| 🔗 Enlace: | Ver artículo original |
Nota de transparencia: Este artículo ha sido traducido y adaptado del inglés al español para facilitar su comprensión. El contenido se mantiene fiel a la fuente original, disponible en el enlace proporcionado arriba.
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