© 2024 St. Louis Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Kansas City will host World Cup soccer matches in 2026

 A family from Shawnee at Kansas City's Power & Light District on Thursday awaited FIFA's announcement of cities selected for 2026 World Cup matches.
Greg Echlin
/
KCUR
A family from Shawnee at Kansas City's Power & Light District on Thursday awaited FIFA's announcement of cities selected for 2026 World Cup matches.

Kansas City will host World Cup tournament soccer matches in 2026, FIFA announced Thursday afternoon.

Kansas City is among 16 cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico that will host matches in the world’s biggest singular-sports event. It will be the biggest sports event ever in the Kansas City area.

Though the teams and dates for 2026 have yet to be determined, the tournament is expected to have an enormous economic impact on the Kansas City region when it takes place, most likely in the month of July.

“We definitely presented the best argument for Kansas City,” said Jeff Sittner, Burns & McDonnell's project manager for global facilities, who worked with the city’s organizing committee for more than two years to create a unique experience when the FIFA delegation visited Kansas City in October 2021.

Arrowhead Stadium hasn’t hosted a soccer match since 2015, when the national teams from Mexico and Paraguay squared off in a friendly match. But when FIFA delegates arrived in the fall, a team from Burns & McDonnell greeted them with Oculus headgear designed to give them a 3-D virtual reality look into Arrowhead in 2026.

When the FIFA committee members donned the headgear, they saw a soccer pitch image from an end zone view at Arrowhead. Because a soccer pitch is wider than an NFL football field, some lower bowl grandstand seats would be temporarily removed from one side.

“I think the Oculus and the presentation definitely is a wow factor,” Sittner said.

Through his 25 years in the sports venues design business, Sittner has worked with FIFA before. But he had never given FIFA a virtual reality picture of what was going to happen in the future.

“It was definitely the first time that FIFA has been presented concepts in this manner,” said Sittner. “They were very complimentary about that.”

 Jeff Sittner of Burns & McDonnell with the Oculus headgear and equipment that helped sell FIFA officials on Kansas City as a site for World Cup games.
Greg Echlin
/
KCUR
Jeff Sittner of Burns & McDonnell with the Oculus headgear and equipment that helped sell FIFA officials on Kansas City as a site for World Cup games.

The presentation required some last-minute adjustments after the delay of a meeting that was scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. with an Oculus device that was sensitive to sunlight. It didn’t start until two hours later.

“By that time, as you can imagine, the sun was changing positions we had set up on the field,” said Sittner. “It was starting to get rather warm. We moved from the field up to the press box. We tried to in advance (know) where they’re going to be and prepare for when they were going to see the VR. Our team was scrambling to put them in the right position.”

On Sunday, representatives of the Chiefs, Sporting Kansas City, the Kansas City Sports Commission and the Visit KC bureau will travel to New York for a series of FIFA workshops and meetings. FIFA is expected to relay a business model for each host city to follow during the next four years leading up to the 2026 matches.

“Modifying existing stadiums certainly come with its own set of challenges,” said Kansas City bid director Katherine Holland. “But at least you’ve got the infrastructure there from which to work and that’s been a lot of the conversation that we’ve engaged with them (FIFA) during the bid process, insuring them that Arrowhead can support these modifications.”

Sittner added, “When you consider what we’ve done when the Royals won the World Series, when the Chiefs won the Super Bowl, all those events and the NFL Draft coming to Kansas City, there is a team of people that do an amazing job to make sure that people who attend those events have no idea how complicated and how much energy goes into it.”

Greg Echlin