Submitted by vvsbari t3_ztyqqg in boston

Massholes we are too complacent about this! It needs to end! So I today saw that Boston was a host city for the 2026 World Cup, and I thought “Oh! They must be constructing a new stadium!” But no. It’s Gillette. I get it’s easier to generalize, but man, are the World Cup fans gonna be let down lol. That area so is depressing! Doesn’t represent Boston at all.

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SelfDestructSep2020 t1_j1g3pwv wrote

Gillette is also getting the 2023 Army Navy game and depending on where you see the ads its "at Boston"

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evhan55 t1_j1g6fqg wrote

Live in the area, can confirm is depressing

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michael_scarn_21 t1_j1g8udc wrote

I said this when I saw that Foxborough was a venue. Overseas football fans aren't used to stadiums an hour outside the city that have no public transit except for one single train (not one train route just one individual train). It's going to be a shit experience for people to be stuck in parking lots and to not be able to drink because they need to drive back to Boston.

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Cameron_james t1_j1g9ar6 wrote

London's Wembly Stadium is like 40 minutes outside of London. Hopefully, the MBTA will get those trains running those nights.

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michael_scarn_21 t1_j1gam7s wrote

Wembley Stadium is in London. It is served directly by 3 different tube lines (Jubilee, Metropolitan and Bakerloo) as well as 4 different commuter rail lines and it's on about 15 bus routes. You can get out of there very fast after a match even with a 90,000 capacity crowd and comparing it to Foxborough is honestly laughable.

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calguy1955 t1_j1gc15g wrote

Many US stadiums use the name of the bigger well known city they were originally located in. The SF 49ers play 40 miles away in Santa Clara next to San Jose. The Dallas Cowboys play a half hour away in Arlington. The NY Giants and Jets both play in New Jersey!

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nattarbox t1_j1gcbz2 wrote

Can’t be worse than literally any part of Qatar or Russia.

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potus1001 t1_j1gcfir wrote

Well I guess that’s going to be the first priority of Maura Healy’s new MBTA GM.

On the plus side for those of us who live in Boston, at least we don’t need to make plans to be out of town during that period.

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Cameron_james t1_j1gd407 wrote

I know Wembley is in London. I lived in London. And, London is also massive. It's 7 times the square footage of Boston (650+ to under 90). Wembley's not in Downtown London from a tourist perspective.

Fenway is "in Boston." You can walk to Fenway from basically any tourist neighborhood of Boston. You aren't walking to Wembley from Picadilly, South Bank, Hyde Park, Kensington, Chelsea, etc...

My place was near Southwark. It was about an hour to get to Wembley on a game/concert night. It's a longer line getting out of there and onto a train (Wembley Park is about a half mile) than Foxboro.

Back Bay to Foxboro is around 50 minutes on the train. Covent Garden to Wembely is not much faster.

All this said...rather see game/concert in London than in Foxboro...and I'd trust a London train over the T. And London trains compared to driving to Foxboro. It's not even close - London trains X 50 over a four lane road.

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powsandwich t1_j1gdjq0 wrote

It took the Pats sucking for people to finally start talking out loud about how gillette is a glorified strip mall no one likes getting to. It really is a shame Kraft just doubled down and is spending $250m on upgrades and continues to hold the Revs prisoner

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michael_scarn_21 t1_j1gewrb wrote

Yes Wembley isn't in central London but it's about 20-25 minutes from major central London rail termini (for example Paddington) and downtown London so not really comparable to The Foxboro time. The Foxboro train might only take 50 minutes but you're not adding in the wait for a train with MBTA headways, even if they do increase service.

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michael_scarn_21 t1_j1gfa0n wrote

You'd have to be pretty dense to actually think they will make the changes necessary to increase service enough to make a difference (electrification and an extra platform at Foxborough) in time for the world cup given the track record of infrastructure improvement timelines on the MBTA.

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BesponFatigues1230 t1_j1gfqhr wrote

Foxborough was used for last World Cup in the US in ‘94 too …most fans will stay in Boston and make the trip out there just for the game

A bunch of the Stadiums being used are not in the cities listed as hosts cities …San Fran is another for example …hell the NYC games aren’t even in the same state

Are people not aware that the World Cup has already been here in the past?

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VMP85 t1_j1ggnee wrote

It's evident you haven't been to sporting events at some of the other stadiums being chosen. The area surrounding Gillette is a lot better than the area surrounding NRG Stadium, Levis Stadium, Arrowhead, Sofi, and Hard Rock. Thanks the the NFL, no country on Earth exceeds, matches, or comes close to the stadiums we have in the US. 2026 is going to be the most attended World Cup ever. Almost all of the stadiums lack good transit. It won't matter. All of the games will sellout. Overseas fans will come in droves and stay with their relatives or friends. This will be a lot different than a typical World Cup.

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Anustart15 t1_j1ghhe6 wrote

I just picked a random spot right in the middle of London and looked at Publix transport times to Wembley and it was 50 minutes. Rounded it to about an hour. I'd imagine that time can swing a good 15+ minutes in either direction depending on where exactly in the center of town you are, but it doesn't feel too outrageous of a generalization

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VMP85 t1_j1ghhii wrote

Where is Kraft going to build a 65-70k seat stadium that is close to Boston? There were talks 25 years ago or so to build in South Boston and that got shot down. Besides, do we really want a football stadium taking up precious land in Boston, which will need plenty of parking? Kraft isn't holding anyone hostage.

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powsandwich t1_j1giga2 wrote

He would never move the Pats at this point, it was just poor planning back in the day when he held out for the best deal and threatened to move the team to CT. Revs stadium would only be 20k capacity and there are plenty of potential sites for that

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VMP85 t1_j1gix5f wrote

I mean, poor mass transit hasn't stopped hundreds of thousands of Europeans from coming to the US to live. I think they'll manage getting to a soccer game (if they can even get tickets) via car. Also, Mexicans, Brazilians, Argentinians and even Australians tend to travel better than a lot of European countries to World Cups.

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bunker_baby t1_j1gj8bt wrote

If enough people complain for long enough, i bet the single train could turn in to many trains to and from the game(s). Complain to your state senator via email about inadequate transit to and from foxboro now, 4 years in advance. Get the ball rolling.

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Cameron_james t1_j1gjwlo wrote

I just checked on Citymapper - the ultimate transportation app - for a Tuesday 5 PM, say for a 7 pm game, right. It's over 30 minutes from Paddington to Wembley for every option whether rail, tube, bus or some combo.

The best benefit of London's options over Bostons option (there's really only one) is that there's a rail/tube/bus option from all directions and times. And, they run regularly, while the MBTA will probably do 1 or 2 trips down and 1-2 trips back. So, while you're not waiting for the Foxboro train to arrive (because it'll be a special ticket time, not a commuter rail schedule), you have no options for winging it to get there extra early or stay extra late, as you would in London.

My overall point is that most football stadiums aren't in the "city." You're probably taking a train to the stadium from your hotel. MetLife near NYC isn't closer to NYC than Foxboro is to Boston. That's an hour+ trip by train out to a marshland if you stay in Midtown. (And if you stay outside, then you're taking the 30 minute train into NYC.) I think SoFi Stadium in LA is closer to the city, but public transport I don't know well.

However, if I was recommending a city to see WC 2026 and your team didn't matter - I'd choose Toronto. You can legit stay in Toronto and walk to the games and just about anyplace else a tourist wants in the city.

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__plankton__ t1_j1gkjx7 wrote

Hosting the World Cup at foxborough is a great way to let the world know we are not, in fact, a world class city

Edit—ITS NOT EVEN INSIDE 128!!

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wandererarkhamknight t1_j1gn4up wrote

Like 1994 WC, probably they will run “soccer trains” and buses. Will it be enough or not and how the buses will deal with traffic is another question. There are very few cities like Indianapolis or Chicago where the stadium is close to downtown or within city. Most places have to arrange makeshift transportation. Kansas City is planning a hub-and-spoke approach to transport fans from multiple points by buses.

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SHSFilmClub t1_j1gskew wrote

I live right up from the train station near Sharon it’s gonna be hell

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popornrm t1_j1h196f wrote

Why are people complaining? So much less traffic. So much less rush.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1hlf7x wrote

You act like this is not typical for US stadiums. Sadly it is very normal for US stadiums to not be actually located in the city itself.

AT&T stadium outside of Dallas, which is also hosting, literally does not have any public transit connection to the city. At least they can run the commuter rail to Gillette for the World Cup, and they will also have shuttle buses like they did in 1994. Most tourists will stay in Boston and just go out to the games using the train or buses.

These sort of issues will reflect generally poorly on the state of US public transit in 2026, but acting like it will specifically single out Boston as a “bad city” or whatever is ridiculous. The majority of the US venues are not in urban areas, they are in suburbs outside the stadium. Levi’s stadium is even further from San Francisco than Gillette is from Boston in terms of mileage and is in a different metro area than San Francisco. MetLife is in suburban New Jersey, not NYC.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1hlpbo wrote

They definitely need to build a stadium for the Revs closer into the city, they only need a 20k-25k seat stadium and that could certainly be done much closer to the city.

That said, that would change nothing for the World Cup, the minimum venue size for the World Cup is generally around 40,000.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1hmhky wrote

Yeah, while I hate Gillette’s location myself, not sure why this sub is acting like all the tourists are going to stay in Foxborough. The vast majority of tourists will stay in Boston and will take the commuter rail and/or shuttle buses they will set up out to the games.

Also weird how some are acting like this is unique to Boston when almost every US venue for 2026 is located outside the city in a suburban area. It’s a US issue generally, not a Boston specific one.

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powsandwich t1_j1hnqsn wrote

Still rumblings about Everett. The site behind Night Shift will get redeveloped at some point. And the Mystic power plant redev is going to be huge. Still some opportunities left. Fingers crossed

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powsandwich t1_j1hoop7 wrote

Unrelated but I might like to see the odds that all games sellout. Some Qatar games had visibly empty seats (granted it’s Qatar), but also the 2026 cup is going to be expanded to 48 teams for the first time. There’s going to be a lot of seats to fill

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spyda24 t1_j1hsdeb wrote

Everyone from Massachusetts is from Boston, everything is in Boston, keeps from having to answer the question “where is that?”

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TheTr7nity t1_j1hu7q3 wrote

They really should build a new stadium closer to Boston and maybe a retractable one too

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FluxCapacitorMechan t1_j1hyqg9 wrote

Boston/Foxboro did it before in 94 for one of the World Cup games. And no one cared.

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humanzee70 t1_j1i0bfc wrote

Lol. All the people in here saying Foxborough is a “depressing area” have obviously never been in a “depressing area”. It’s a nice little suburban town, once you get off route 1.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1i1ndy wrote

I feel like /r/boston is specifically bad for this, people always act like anything wrong with Boston is only a problem in Boston. There are some problems that are more Boston specific, but certainly not this one or many others that come up on here. But you're right that complaining about stuff without really thinking about it is a reddit thing in general.

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man2010 t1_j1il7pb wrote

I think people around the world would much rather travel to North America than Qatar for the World Cup, never mind the US/Mexico/Canada having 150x the population of Qatar

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Comfortable-Scar4643 t1_j1in2b4 wrote

Parking sucks. But I sort of am getting better at finding the good lots. And yeah, I’ll be going to the soccer. It will be so great.

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RoaminRonin13 t1_j1iokm1 wrote

I mean, you probably do need to make plans if you’re not interested in being around for World Cup fever - people are still going to stay in Boston and the metro area, if only because of hotel capacity. But realistic they’ll do it because nobody really wants to be a tourist in Foxborough.

It could be great - generate a lot of tourist dollars for the city without us building (with public subsidies / funds) a new stadium, and with the worst of the traffic a) not being downtown and b) being someplace that regularly has terrible traffic due to sporting events.

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santaclausbos t1_j1izmjw wrote

So should we build a massive stadium right in the middle of Boston? You gonna pay for it?

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737900ER t1_j1j20zb wrote

I think the way we've done pro sports arenas in Boston is actually pretty good. Fenway and TD Garden are in the city and super convenient. The Red Sox host 81+ home games a year. The Celtics and Bruins host 41+ each too. The Patriots only host 8-9 and the Revs host 17 which isn't really enough to be worth dedicating a lot of land too, but worth having a rail service for on game days. I just wish more big concerts were at Fenway instead of Gillette or at least had a train.

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737900ER t1_j1j2zwd wrote

I actually don't think it's a problem. Fenway and TD Garden each host 81-82 regular season games and are incredibly easy to get to. It's much more important to have those venues centrally located. Gillette hosts 8 or 9 (excluding the Revs) and does have a rail link to Boston and Providence on Patriots gamedays.

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ObservantOrangutan t1_j1j5hii wrote

Boston has lucked out massively with sports venues. Having 3 of the 4 major teams play right in the city is pretty good. Particularly that the Garden was able to be (re)built in almost the same place. I think someday when the time comes to replace Fenway, that’ll be the biggest problem.

Concerts at Fenway are definitely more convenient but as a venue it’s just awful. Terrible sight lines, terrible acoustics, and the setup usually shuts down half the streets around the ballpark for a week or two

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drtywater t1_j1jg80r wrote

Oh fuck off with this complaint. Its Metro Boston its good enough. It is a T community its good enough. Boston is an unusually small major city so counting more of the surrounding towns/cities as Boston is fine.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1jkd2l wrote

Nah, I expect most games to sell out. The US has a huge population and even though soccer isn’t the most popular sport here over 25 million people in the US watched the 2022 World Cup final. Qatar’s entire population is only 2.8 million people, which was part of the issue, there simply weren’t that many local fans attending. The US will provide more local fans simply by virtue of having 100+ times the population.

Add in the fact that travel from Latin America will be much easier and Latin American fans travel in huge numbers, and the fact European fans won’t be as bothered by the location in terms of controversy, and I suspect attendances will be high.

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WinsingtonIII t1_j1jle4t wrote

They will run trains and shuttle buses as they did in 1994. I feel like people are ignoring the fact they already hosted the World Cup in Foxborough and did stuff like that to handle the crowds last time.

This is also hardly a specific issue to Boston. Pretty much all of the US venues for 2026 are outside of the city with poor or no public transit options to access them.

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5teerPike t1_j1jywwm wrote

When that golf tournament came to Brookline it really gunked up the traffic so tbh I'm fine with huge sporting events like that not being in direct vicinity to or right within the city

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Itchy-Marionberry-62 t1_j1k7s64 wrote

Did you expect us to build a new stadium for a bunch of lager louts for just a few games? World Cup is as boring as Soccer.

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fourier_lemonade t1_j1pud4h wrote

I believe it. Public transit in DFW is pretty horrendous. It’s honestly impossible for me to complain about the T at all having spent my latter childhood years in DFW where you’re lucky to have a sidewalk.

Edit: if I would have to guess there may be a bus system for UT-Arlington

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