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Teams have been placed in Dallas and Kansas City. See who is playing in a town near you, and potentially calling OKC home.
Tickets to the 2026 World Cup are among the most coveted tickets in sports. Buying them, therefore, is both confusing and costly in any host city. Dallas is no exception.
As a host nation, the United States was placed into Group D before the Final Draw even occurred. They will play two of their group stage matches in "Los Angeles Stadium" (SoFi Stadium) and one match in "Seattle Stadium" (Lumen Field). Here are the United States' opponents in Group D:
With the matchups for the FIFA World Cup 2026 almost set, eager fans can finally purchase tickets for the world's biggest sporting event. Two Texas cities are hosting World Cup games: AT&T Stadium in Dallas (Arlington, TX) and NRG Stadium in Houston will be the stage for many of the matches.
AT&T Stadium, which will be known as Dallas Stadium during the tournament, will host five group stage matches; Two for Group F, two for Group J and one for Group L. The first of the five matches in Arlington will take place on Sunday, June 14. FIFA will release a final match schedule for the group stage on Saturday.
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World Cup 2026 Draw takeaways: List of teams that could play in Dallas
The countdown to the biggest sporting event in the world just got real for North Texas! The official draw for the FIFA World Cup 2026 took place Friday, and we now know what teams could play in Dallas.
WASHINGTON – Dan Hunt sounded almost star struck following the FIFA World Cup draw Friday, listing off the “soccer royalty” who turned up for the two-hour celebration of the beautiful game, including top coaches and legendary players he described as heroes.
During the FIFA World Cup 2026 draw on Friday, fans gathered in Uptown Dallas to find out the groupings. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, already have a place and a date for their wedding. Ahead, learn all the details.
The world’s biggest sporting event is coming to AT&T Stadium. Follow along as the World Cup draw determines which groups teams will play in.
With the FIFA World Cup bringing world-class soccer to North Texas next summer, Dallas’ leading cultural institutions aren’t sitting on the sidelines. Organizers on Dec. 5 announced a series of community events set to take place from June 19 to July 11.