DroneShield was selected to provide counter-drone coverage for the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Kansas City, and Sentrycs, acquired this year by Ondas Holdings (NASDAQ: ONDS), was selected alongside it 1. Counter-unmanned-aircraft-system (C-UAS) work means detecting and defeating hostile or stray drones over a venue, the kind of perimeter a stadium hosting matches watched worldwide now requires. The federal C-UAS budget for the tournament was set at $250m by FEMA, the US disaster-and-security agency .
The selection works as a shop window. A marquee event seen by a global audience doubles as a live audition for the same vendors chasing military and border contracts, and securing a slot is a reference customer of a kind a glossy brochure cannot buy. For Sentrycs the win lands weeks after Ondas folded it into a roll-up of drone and counter-drone firms, so a freshly acquired name gets a high-visibility deployment to point future buyers at. For DroneShield it is a second US revenue stream sitting beside its border-system work. A clean, well-run World Cup deployment becomes a procurement credential; a visible failure becomes the opposite, which is the risk that comes attached to any audition this public.
