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Tribune News Service
Sport
Hayes Gardner

Baltimore not among 16 host cities for 2026 World Cup held in U.S., Canada and Mexico

BALTIMORE — When Boston and Philadelphia were announced, it was obvious what was to come. And by the time New York was selected — the final nail in the coffin — Baltimore officially had been eliminated as a 2026 World Cup host.

Baltimore, vying to host World Cup matches at M&T Bank Stadium as part of a joint bid with Washington, came up short as FIFA, the global governing body of soccer, selected 11 U.S. cities but did not pick Baltimore during its televised selection show Thursday evening.

Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Mo., Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Seattle made the cut, while Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara will represent Mexico and Toronto and Vancouver will host in Canada.

National reporters had pegged Baltimore as on the bubble, but Boston and Philadelphia — other East Coast cities on the bubble — were announced instead. Baltimore missed the cut alongside Cincinnati, Denver, Edmonton, Nashville and Orlando.

Being passed over for Boston was a tough pill to swallow for some soccer fans who gathered at Abbey Burger Bistro in Fells Point for a watch party, pointing out that Gillette Stadium, the home of the New England Patriots where Boston’s games will be played, is a 45-minute drive from that city’s downtown.

“It’s pretty disappointing,” said soccer fan Simon Torres. “I thought that we had a strong bid, especially when you pair us with D.C. I think we were shorted.”

Soccer reporter Grant Wahl called Boston being picked over Baltimore as the “only surprise” of the announcement, and he pointed to Patriots owner Bob Kraft’s friendship with FIFA president Gianni Infantino as a potential reason for the pick.

Terry Hasseltine, the executive director of the Maryland Sports Commission, which oversaw Baltimore’s campaign, expressed disappointment about the loss at a Thursday evening news conference at M&T Bank Stadium.

“Extremely disappointed that FIFA did not see through the fog and through the dark that Baltimore, Maryland, in combination with Washington, D.C., was a one-two punch that deserved to host a World Cup in 2026,” Hasseltine said.

During an hourlong program, Infantino and other FIFA officials slowly revealed the 16 host cities, broken down into three regions: West, Central and East. The U.S. will have 11 sites, Mexico will have three and Canada will have two.

In April, Baltimore and Washington combined bids, which each city felt could increase its chances of being selected. Washington initially bid to host matches of its own, but the combined effort sought to unite Washington’s status as the nation’s capital with the more attractive venue of M&T Bank Stadium, rather than FedEx Field in Landover, home of the NFL’s Washington Commanders. (D.C. United soccer-specific Audi Field is considered too small to host World Cup games.)

FedEx Field has had issues recently — including a burst pipe and a broken railing during NFL games last season — while M&T Bank Stadium will receive a “Facility of Merit” award this year from the National Center for Spectator Sports Safety and Security.

Under the combined bid, games would’ve taken place in Baltimore while Washington would have hosted a fan festival on the National Mall, coinciding with the nation’s 250th birthday.

The 2026 World Cup will be unique in two ways: for the first time, the tournament will have 48 teams (instead of 32) and it will be hosted by three countries.

FIFA officials visited Baltimore in September, attending the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs game along with 70,000 fans. After that visit, Hasseltine said Thursday evening, local officials felt that Baltimore had a very good chance of being selected.

He’d said earlier that FIFA found Baltimore’s bid to be “authentic.”

In April, Hasseltine said preliminary data collected during Baltimore’s independent bid found that hosting World Cup matches would have an economic impact on the city of between $400 million and $700 million dollars.

However, FIFA ultimately chose other sites over Charm City.

The U.S. has hosted the men’s World Cup once before (1994) and the women’s World Cup twice (1999, 2003); 2026 will mark the first time that games are not played in Washington.

International soccer will come to Baltimore this summer, though. English Premier League sides Arsenal and Everton will play an exhibition match at M&T Bank Stadium on July 16.

Hasseltine called for Baltimore-area soccer fans to make sure that game is a sellout to show that FIFA made the “wrong decision”

Torres, a leader of a Baltimore-based Arsenal supporters’ club, said he thought that game could have showcased Baltimore as an international soccer city ahead of the World Cup.

“We had a good bid,” Torres said. “Congrats to everybody who got it. Maybe next time.”

2026 FIFA World Cup host cities

WEST

Vancouver

Seattle

San Francisco

Los Angeles

Guadalajara

CENTRAL

Kansas City

Atlanta

Dallas

Houston

Monterrey

Mexico City

EAST

Toronto

Boston

Philadelphia

Miami

New York/New Jersey

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