Breaking
ARالحرس الثوري الإيراني يستهدف منشآت أمريكية في البحرين والكويت رداً على ضربات واشنطنDERaketenalarm in Kuwait nach US-Angriffen gegen den IranDEHochhaus in Manhattan: Angst vor Teileinsturz nach Rissen und absackenden DeckenCN中聯油脂苯駢芘超標引發政治風暴 議員要求中央官員下台道歉RUДва танкера повреждены в Таганрогском заливе в результате атаки БПЛАDEMarine Le Pen: Berufungsgericht mildert Urteil abVNVợ đau khổ vì chồng muốn có con trai dù đã có 3 con gáiRUАтака ВСУ на Ярославскую область отбита, все БПЛА нейтрализованыARروسيا تطلق تجارب فضائية لدراسة تأثير الإشعاع على فعالية الأدويةCN中國湖北罕見龍捲風釀11死331傷 災區空拍畫面曝光ARالحرس الثوري الإيراني يستهدف منشآت أمريكية في البحرين والكويت رداً على ضربات واشنطنDERaketenalarm in Kuwait nach US-Angriffen gegen den IranDEHochhaus in Manhattan: Angst vor Teileinsturz nach Rissen und absackenden DeckenCN中聯油脂苯駢芘超標引發政治風暴 議員要求中央官員下台道歉RUДва танкера повреждены в Таганрогском заливе в результате атаки БПЛАDEMarine Le Pen: Berufungsgericht mildert Urteil abVNVợ đau khổ vì chồng muốn có con trai dù đã có 3 con gáiRUАтака ВСУ на Ярославскую область отбита, все БПЛА нейтрализованыARروسيا تطلق تجارب فضائية لدراسة تأثير الإشعاع على فعالية الأدويةCN中國湖北罕見龍捲風釀11死331傷 災區空拍畫面曝光
Newsgather
BackQueens, NY: A Soccer Haven Amidst World Cup Buzz and Immigration Concerns
Queens, NY: A Soccer Haven Amidst World Cup Buzz and Immigration Concerns
Developing
NPR News6/11/2026Sports4 min readUnited States

Queens, NY: A Soccer Haven Amidst World Cup Buzz and Immigration Concerns

Quick Look

  • As the World Cup begins, Queens, NY, a hub for immigrant communities, celebrates soccer.
  • However, concerns about immigration crackdowns and high ticket prices temper the excitement, with many opting to watch on TV.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The World Cup is commencing with New York and New Jersey as host regions, expecting over a million visitors. Queens, known as an immigrant enclave, has a deep connection to soccer.

Font size

The World Cup kicks off this week with New York and New Jersey among the 11 U.S. host regions for the tournament's 39-day run. Some 1.2 million visitors are expected to flock to the area. But ask New Yorkers about soccer, and you'll likely be pointed in the direction of Queens, where soccer is more than a sport. It's a way of life.

Cutting through Queens is the 7 train, also known as "the International Express." Every stop passes through a different immigrant enclave, each with a unique relationship to the beautiful game. NPR spent a recent Sunday traveling along the 7 line, talking to local players and fans. We started at the Flushing Meadows stop, a sprawling green park filled with soccer fields.

NEW YORK — It is early morning in Queens, and the heat is already oppressive. While watching his team play from the sidelines, Coach Guillermo Andrade explains how soccer saved his life.

Back in Peru, Andrade was a physical education teacher. He says the country was being rocked by corruption and violence, and he saw many of his students leave. He eventually did the same, picking up 25 years ago and coming to New York City.

"My first job was handing out flyers on the street in Manhattan. It was winter, it was cold, the kind that makes it so you can't even take your hand out of your gloves," he said. "I would ask myself 'What am I even doing here?'"

On one of those winter days, his sister encouraged him to go check out the soccer games in Queens. He took the 7 line. When he got to the fields there, he heard, "Coach? Coach Guille? Is that you?"

Some of his former students from back in Peru were calling to him.

Andrade started coming to the fields in Queens every Saturday and Sunday.

"Five days a week, I felt dead," he said. "On weekends, out on these fields, I would come back to life."

These days, Andrade works full time as a coach. He's excited to see the World Cup matches, especially Portuguese superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, who may be playing his last cup. But he won't be going to the nearby stadium just 20 miles away; with the cheapest tickets at about $1,000 a piece, Andrade, like most people in this working class community, can't afford to go in person. Like others, he'll be watching on TV.

Andrade also predicts many soccer lovers in the area will stay home out of caution. Queens has been a target of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown; some of his own players have been swept up in raids.

In places like Corona Station, a Mexican enclave farther down the 7 line, there is a lot of trepidation and anger about the U.S. government's tactics against immigrants, many of whom are devoted to the tournament.

"I think it's hypocritical," said a street vendor named Elodia, who asked that her last name be withheld out of fear of being targeted by ICE agents.

These days she's selling Mexican soccer jerseys. She excited to see Mexico play in the World Cup, but says it's bittersweet amid the Trump administration's treatment of people from other nations living in the U.S.

"The U.S. is going to make a lot of money off this," Elodia says. "And meanwhile, we're being treated like animals."

ICE officials say they aren't planning enforcement activity at World Cup matches. But Elodia said many immigrants will be too scared to come out and watch.

Despite the anxiety, there is a great deal of soccer joy here.

Farther down the 7 line are South American neighborhoods. Near the 90th Street-Elmhurst station, dozens stand in the shade trading Panini stickers of World Cup players to paste in collectible booklets.

Among them is 13-year-old Juan David Iza, a die-hard Ecuador fan.

He's just bought a plate of salchipapas (pan-fried hot dogs with french fries) and two Panini sticker packets. He opens them, and to his disappointment, none of them are the ones he needs. But then his luck turns: The second packet has a sticker of the South Korean captain, Son Heung-min!

A couple of blocks down, away from the ruckus of the Panini collectors, is Little Argentina.

Sitting under a giant mural of reigning champion Lionel Messi, wearing his Argentina soccer jersey, Angel Ojeda says he thinks Argentina has a chance to win the World Cup a second time in a row.

Only two teams have ever won back-to-back World Cups: Italy in the 1930s and Brazil in the '60s. Betting sites tend to put this year's odds in favor of France and Spain. Ojeda scoffs.

"We're gonna be double champions," Ojeda says. "I have no doubts. I could be wrong. But no, I don't think I am."

A few more stops along on the 7 train, in Little Bangladesh, there is one man who might agree with him.

Shipud Costa works in customer service at LaGuardia Airport in Queens. Bangladesh did not qualify for the Cup, but Costa has one dream: that Argentine front man Messi flies into LaGuardia one day.

When that happens, Costa knows exactly what he's going to do.

"First, I'll run and hug him. I have to. I'll break all the security," he jokes.

But if Messi does fly into LaGuardia, he has some advice.

"You wanna take the Q70 bus, it's free for you, Messi. Transfer to the 7 line. Welcome to Queens."

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Many soccer lovers in Queens will stay home out of caution due to immigration crackdowns.

    Likely · Within days

  • Argentina will win the World Cup for a second time in a row.

    Possible · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • Will ICE enforcement activities impact immigrant attendance at World Cup matches?
  • What will be the economic impact of the World Cup on Queens?
  • How will the immigration policies affect the atmosphere of the World Cup in the US?
  • What is the long-term impact of soccer on immigrant communities in Queens?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by NPR News.

Related Stories

More on this topicWorld Cup