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2026 FIFA World Cup
11JUN

Penn Station bars commuters for eight World Cup matches

3 min read
09:02UTC

New York's busiest commuter terminal will lock out 650,000 daily passengers for four hours before each MetLife match, with one closure landing on a Monday evening rush hour.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Penn Station will close to commuters for four hours before each MetLife match, an unprecedented prioritisation of tournament traffic.

Penn Station will not close for security but for capacity: NJ Transit has designated the terminal as fan-only: NJ Transit has designated the terminal as fan-only for four hours before each match to move 40,000 of the 80,000 expected fans per game. MetLife Stadium's pre-existing infrastructure constraints directly drove this decision.

No previous World Cup has required this. Brazil 2014, Russia 2018, and Qatar 2022 managed crowd flow alongside regular service or built dedicated links. MetLife Stadium was not designed for rail-dependent crowds at this scale; NJ Transit's network converges on Penn Station with no equivalent bypass.

Political exposure sits sharpest at the 22 June Norway-Senegal closure: a Monday at 4pm–8pm, directly overlapping evening rush hour. Alternative routes (PATH, ferries, Amtrak via Moynihan Train Hall) exist but none matches Penn Station's capacity or geographic reach.

Assemblyman Bhalla's framing captures the equity dimension precisely: the closure penalises the 99% who cannot afford tournament tickets in order to ease access for those who can.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

If you commute through Penn Station in New York, you will be locked out for four hours before each of eight World Cup matches so football fans can use the trains instead. One of those closures is on a Monday evening rush hour.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

MetLife Stadium's design pre-dates the era of mega-event, rail-dependent crowd management. Built in 2010, it has 82,500 seats and minimal dedicated rail infrastructure.

The Meadowlands Rail Line—a seasonal, single-service line operated by NJ Transit—connects directly to Penn Station but was never designed for sustained World Cup-scale loads across eight matches. The capacity gap between what MetLife needs (40,000 fans moved by rail per match) and what the Meadowlands Line can deliver without disrupting the broader Penn Station network is the structural cause of the closure decision.

What could happen next?
  • The precedent of closing a major public commuter terminal for a commercial sporting event creates a template other host cities may replicate in future tournaments.

    Long term · 0.6
  • Commuters on the Monday 22 June evening rush (Norway vs Senegal) face the highest disruption; PATH and ferry alternatives cannot match Penn Station's throughput during peak demand.

    Short term · 0.85
  • The equity dimension—wealthy ticket holders prioritised over working commuters—will generate sustained political pressure on NJ Transit and the host committee.

    Short term · 0.8
First Reported In

Update #6 · FIFA's stealth price hike

CBS New York· 10 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Penn Station bars commuters for eight World Cup matches
No previous World Cup has closed a host city's primary commuter terminal to accommodate tournament traffic. The decision creates a legal and political precedent for prioritising commercial event access over public transit.
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA's 48-team format, projecting $13.1 billion in 2026-cycle revenue against $7.5 billion for 2019-2022, opened on 11 June despite simultaneous legal, labour and security crises. Expanding to 48 sides structurally reduced the stakes of individual group results, which is both its commercial logic and the mechanism that let the build-up machinery run without cancellation.
Brazil
Brazil
Brazil open Group C against Morocco on 13 June missing Neymar, Rodrygo, Estevao and Militao; Ancelotti expressed no regrets carrying an injured Neymar and targets the Haiti fixture on 20 June for his return. Morocco's full-strength XI is rated higher by performance index than Brazil's depleted opener lineup, making this the most awkward first fixture any pre-tournament favourite has drawn.
United States
United States
The co-host avoided its most damaging opening image when UNITE HERE Local 11 reached a tentative deal with Legends on 9 June, pulling a threatened strike off the table days before Pochettino's 4-3-3 faces Paraguay. The agreement requires a ratification vote this week; rejection returns the threat before the first US match.
South Africa
South Africa
Bafana Bafana returned to the World Cup after a 16-year absence in Hugo Broos's final tournament before retirement, arriving at the Azteca opener with a counter-attacking shape to exploit possession-heavy hosts at altitude. Broos told his players to silence the Mexican crowd; his pace through Appollis and Mofokeng sets the tone for Group A.
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico opened the tournament at home on 11 June carrying a 0W-5L-2D opener record and a sold-out Azteca, while the official Zocalo fan zone was occupied by teachers and families of the disappeared on the same morning. Sheinbaum's offer of 18 alternative venues rather than a clearance order reflects her calculation that force produces worse headlines than co-existence.
Norwegian Football Federation
Norwegian Football Federation
NFF president Lise Klaveness sent a letter of support backing FairSquare's Article 15 ethics complaint against Infantino, explicitly noting Norway was acting alone as a deliberate signal. The filing converted an external NGO campaign into the first internal federation action against the FIFA president, arriving in the same fortnight as Platini's Paris criminal complaint.