LOS ANGELES (AP) - When the 2026 World Cup begins across North America one year from this week, sports figures from across Los Angeles are hoping the global soccer community will find the U.S. both inspiring and welcoming.
LA sports celebrities anticipate World Cup’s arrival, hope political climate has cooled by then
LOS ANGELES (AP) - When the 2026 World Cup begins across North America one year from this week, sports figures from across Los Angeles are hoping the global soccer community will find the U.S. both inspiring and welcoming.
The Fox network marked the one-year milestone Wednesday night with a big party at its studio lot in Century City. Attendees included everyone from "Ted Lasso" star Jason Sudeikis to luminaries from every corner of the sports world in the nation’s second-largest metropolitan area, including Los Angeles Lakers owner Jeanie Buss and Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh.
"I remember when the World Cup was here in the '90s, and then obviously what our American women's team did to win the World Cup (in 1999)," Harbaugh said. "So yeah, I love sports, I love competition, and I think it's going to be incredible for our state, our city, our country. The vibe is going to be incredible to just have everybody here. I'm looking for another explosion of soccer - football - in America."
The attendees all expressed excitement about the return of the world’s premier soccer tournament to the U.S. while acknowledging the uncertainty of whether the nation’s fraught political climate could present significant challenges to the teams, the World Cup organizers and even the network that will broadcast the tournament domestically.