Trump’s Border Crackdown Is Wreaking Havoc on World Cup
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Houston, World Cup and FIFA Fan Fest
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Anyone who has so much as glanced at the news or scrolled through social media will be aware of the problems plaguing the 2026 FIFA World Cup held in the US, Canada, and Mexico and set to get
Organizers have for years struggled to sell out stadiums for soccer's biggest competition.
Commuters could be up a creek — yet again! The problem-plagued New Jersey Transit system is readying two massive boats to ferry World Cup fans across the Hudson River to games i
Some fans and participants hoping to enter the United States for the World Cup have complained that restrictive immigration rules have presented a roadblock.
That’s no doubt the thought, in one of the seven languages he speaks, coursing through Gianni Infantino’s head Wednesday as FIFA’s president met with the media in Mexico City on the eve of a World Cup with the largest field in history and, it seems, the largest number of problems.
Several soccer fans who paid thousands of dollars for World Cup tickets say they are frustrated with FIFA’s ticketing process, prompting complaints to NBC Los Angeles and scrutiny from state attorneys general.
With the World Cup facing growing crises, Gianni Infantino, the FIFA president, struck a defiant tone on the eve of the competition’s start.
FOX 5 Washington DC on MSN
No World Cup games? No problem. DMV businesses may still see a boost
The closest World Cup games may be taking place in Philadelphia, but a number of different types of businesses in the DMV may still see a boost.
Liverpool.com on MSN
Robbie Fowler 'worried' about Alexander Isak as Liverpool faces World Cup problem
Alexander Isak faces a busy summer as he leads the line for Sweden at the World Cup, but Robbie Fowler has admitted he's worried about the striker's return to Liverpool
WISN 12 News on MSN
Trump called the 2026 World Cup history’s 'most successful.’ Problems cloud ticket sales
Grab your jersey and your pals: World Cup fever is here. Red cards may have taken a starring role at the 2026 tournament’s June 11 opener between Mexico and South Africa, but little could dampen soccer enthusiasts’ anticipation of watching the globe’s greatest male footballers take the field for their countries over the next five weeks.
For months, headlines have been asking whether international supporters will come, whether demand is materializing, and whether host cities are seeing the return they expected. While they’re reasonable questions, they may not capture the full picture.
