The tournament that changed the game
When the United States welcomed the world to the 1994 World Cup, it was more than a sporting event; it was a cultural milestone. The tournament set attendance records that still stand, drawing nearly 3.6 million spectators across its matches and generating unprecedented revenue that helped reshape the financial landscape of global soccer.
Among the 22 Americans who ever wore a World Cup shirt on home soil, figures such as Alexi Lalas, Marcelo Balboa and Tony Meola became household names. Lalas, a charismatic defender, later transitioned to a soccer analyst, while Balboa recalled the electric atmosphere of playing in front of a nation eager for a football identity. Their stories illustrate how the tournament served as a launchpad for many careers.
Legacy in the modern era
The competition also sowed the seeds of Major League Soccer, which was founded in the aftermath of the event. Today, MLS ranks among the world’s top ten leagues, and youth participation in the sport has surged, overtaking baseball as the second‑most‑popular sport among teenagers. The growth is reflected in the steady stream of U.S. qualifiers for subsequent World Cups, a streak broken only once since 1994.
Beyond the numbers, the tournament’s legacy lives in the everyday soccer culture that now permeates schools, parks and living rooms across the country. As former player Cobi Jones, who studied environmental law at UCLA before turning professional, can attest, the 1994 World Cup was a catalyst that turned a niche pastime into a mainstream passion.