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The last time the World Cup was held in America

Unique Football

32 years ago, the FIFA World Cup landed on American soil for the first time, and what followed exceeded almost every expectation placed on it. As the tournament returns to the United States, Canada and Mexico in 2026, it is worth looking back at what made USA ‘94 one of the most commercially and logistically successful editions in the history of the competition. Supporters who want to follow the action closely can find all the relevant fixtures and markets through BETDAQ.

Sceptics were loud in the build-up. Football had no major professional league in the country at the time, and the decision to award the tournament to a nation where the sport barely registered in the mainstream was seen as a commercial gamble by FIFA. What the United States produced instead was a tournament that broke records in almost every measurable category.

Here is a look back at what happened when the World Cup came to America for the first time.

Attendance records that still stand

Across 52 matches played in nine cities, the tournament drew a total attendance of 3,587,538, an average of just under 69,000 per game. Both figures remain World Cup records to this day, even after the competition expanded from 24 to 32 teams at the 1998 edition. The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, which hosted the final, had over 94,000 spectators inside for Brazil against Italy. No World Cup final has come close to that figure since.

A final decided by penalties for the first time

Brazil and Italy played out a goalless final that went the same way after extra time, sending the World Cup final to a penalty shootout for the very first time. Brazil held their nerve, but Italy did not. Roberto Baggio, who had carried his country to the final almost single-handedly despite a goalless group stage, stepped up with Italy needing to score to keep the shootout alive and sent his penalty over the bar. Brazil won 3-2 and claimed a fourth world title.

The rule changes that shaped modern football

USA 94 introduced several regulations that are now fundamental to the game. Three points for a win was used at a World Cup for the first time, replacing the old system that awarded two. The backpass rule was applied throughout, preventing goalkeepers from handling the ball from a deliberate pass by a teammate. The last man rule also came in, meaning a player denying a clear goalscoring opportunity by fouling an attacker through on goal would receive a straight red card. These changes were brought in to encourage more attacking football after the 1990 World Cup in Italy produced the lowest goals-per-game average in the tournament’s history.

Individual records and standout performers

Oleg Salenko of Russia scored five goals in a single match against Cameroon, a record that has never been equalled. Hristo Stoichkov of Bulgaria shared the Golden Boot with Salenko on six goals, leading his country to a semi-final against all expectations. Roger Milla of Cameroon became the oldest player to appear in a World Cup at 42 years and 39 days. Bulgaria’s run to the last four, which included a quarter-final victory over Germany, was one of the more unlikely stories the tournament produced.

A lasting commercial and cultural impact

The tournament generated a surplus of around 50 million dollars, more than double initial projections, which was reinvested into football infrastructure across the country. Major League Soccer launched the following year, a direct consequence of the momentum the World Cup created. Around 11 million Americans watched the USA against Brazil knockout tie on July 4. By almost every measure, USA 94 delivered more than anyone expected.

As the 2026 tournament takes shape across the same country, the 1994 edition provides a useful reference point. What happened three decades ago showed that North America can host a World Cup at the highest level, and this summer will test whether it can do so all over again.

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