Baltimore Sun

Baltimore could get 2026 World Cup games

Winning North American bid bodes well for city

- By Jonas Shaffer and Lauren Lumpkin

host cities for the world’s most watched sporting event likely will include two or three in Canada, three in Mexico and 10 in the United States.

Baltimore is considered the favorite to host the World Cup Team Workshop, which brings together delegation­s from all 48 Baltimore was selected as one of 23 competing nations before the tournament The combined bid of the United States, potential host cities in North America for the for an orientatio­n. National team base camps Mexico and Canada was awarded the 2026 2026 tournament. FIFA will meet with the could be set up at sites such as Loyola FIFA World Cup on Wednesday, moving United Bid Committee over the next two University Maryland and the Naval AcadeBalti­more a step closer toward hosting a my.yearstodet­erminebyla­te2020thec­ities match in the quadrennia­l soccer competitha­t will stage the tournament’s 80 matches. Baltimore and M&T Bank Stadium fared tion. Under the United Bid proposal, the list of World Cup play begins today with Russia vs. Saudi Arabia. SPORTS PG 1

well in FIFA’s assessment of potential game venues. FIFA member nations scored the 70,000-seat stadium 4.2 out of 5 — the third highest score given to any of the proposed venues in North America.

“There’s a lot of things that bode well for Baltimore and M&T Bank Stadium,” said Terry Hasseltine, executive director of Maryland Sports, an agency of the Maryland Stadium Authority. “Andwhenit’s all said and done, I think the United Bid Committee and FIFA in 2020 will have a really hard time not putting our stadium on the list for matches.”

Hasseltine, who is deputy chairman of the Baltimore-Maryland Host Organizing Committee, said Wednesday he thinks the city has an “extremely high” chance of being selected to host.

“Thething that really bodes well is that our venue is in such close proximity to our entertainm­ent and lodging,” he said. The United Bid’s recommende­d hotels — the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore and the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront — are both within two miles of the stadium.

Baltimore’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture poses concerns. The city received its lowest score in that category: a 3 out of 5. Unlike Washington, New York and Philadelph­ia, Baltimore lacks an extensive undergroun­d system.

“Today’s announceme­nt, as exciting as it is, we still have a lot of work to do,” Hasseltine said.

Currently there are no plans to address area transporta­tion, but Hasseltine expects it to be a topic of conversati­on in the years leading up to the competitio­n.

The United Bid beat Morocco 134-65 in a vote of more than 200 member nations of FIFA’s governing body in Moscow to host the 2020 tournament. It’s the first time three nations have been selected to co-host.

“Hosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup is a rare and important moment to demonstrat­e that we are all truly united through sport,” Carlos Cordeiro, president of U.S. Soccer and co-chair of the United Bid, said in a statement. “We are humbled by the trust our colleagues in the FIFA family have put in our bid; strengthen­ed by the unity between our three countries and the CONCACAF region; and excited by the opportunit­y wehaveto put football on a new and sustainabl­e path for generation­s to come.”

Carlos Tolentino, 30, has loved soccer for as long as he can remember. He said he plans to start saving money in case the games do come to Baltimore in eight years.

“Soccer, it’s a universal unifier,” he said. Tolentino is a part-time coach at Columbia FC, a Maryland Major Soccer League team. Delegates of Canada, Mexico and the United States celebrate with FIFA President Gianni Infantino, right, after winning a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup. “It doesn’t matter where you’re from, your religion, your race — soccer combines people.”

If Baltimore is selected as a host city, the games will attract people from across the country and around the world, said Daraius Irani, chief economist at the Regional Economic Studies Institute at Towson University. Hotels, restaurant­s and attraction­s such as the Horseshoe Casino will feel the impact of the national and internatio­nal crowd.

“It would be a great boom for tourism,” Irani said. “Because we’re bringing in people from out of the region, that’s all new dollars. So even if they spend one dollar, that’s one dollar we didn’t have before.”

Hasseltine estimated the economic impact of hosting matches at hundreds of millions of dollars.

Baltimore has a history with soccer, from hosting internatio­nal games to fielding the indoor soccer powerhouse Blast to boasting several soccer bars.

A World Football Challenge match between England’s Chelsea and Italy’s AC Milan in 2009 drew a sellout crowd of 71,203 to M&T Bank Stadium.

Nearly 38,000 watched the U.S. men’s national team rout Cuba, 6-0, and Jamaica edge Haiti, 1-0, in the quarterfin­als of the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup. More than 70,540 saw the United States beat El Salvador, 5-1, and Honduras top Costa Rica, 1-0, in the quarterfin­als of the 2013 Gold Cup.

Steve Goodman, 54, attended the 2013 matches. He said he looks forward to watching internatio­nal teams go head-tohead again.

“Baltimore’s got a great soccer community,” Goodman said. “I think it’s great for Baltimore because we did such a wonderful job with the Gold Cup.”

Mayor Catherine Pugh also expressed excitement.

“We are thrilled to have our great City of Baltimore as among those in the running to host the 2026 FIFA World Cup games,” she said in a statement. “Without question, hosting these prestigiou­s games would serve to inspire a new generation of soccer players across our state and nation. If selected, we intend to make sure that all who come to Baltimore to play soccer, leave with an enduring appreciati­on of Baltimorea­ns and all that we have to offer.”

Other host city finalists include Washington, New York/New Jersey, Boston, which hosted matches in the 1994 World Cup, the last held in North America. Elsewhere in the region, Philadelph­ia is also under considerat­ion.

Hasseltine said the Baltimore committee would now turn to tying up “any loose ends,” from potential practice venues to the creation of green spaces in the city.

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