Foxborough Fires Up the World Cup Grill: Pay the $7.8 Million, FIFA
United States – March 5, 2026 – Foxborough, Massachusetts is withholding the World Cup license for Gillette Stadium unless about $7.8M in public safety costs is covered, with a …
The air around a mega-event always smells the same: pretzel salt, parking-lot diesel, and a thousand clipboard types warming up their printers like it is kickoff. That is Big Event Season. The suits roll in, the slogans get loud, and somebody tries to treat your local budget like an all-you-can-eat queso fountain.
Foxborough, Massachusetts just snapped the tongs and said: not today.
Foxborough is holding the World Cup license until security costs are covered
According to the Associated Press, the Foxborough Select Board has refused to issue the permit needed for World Cup matches at Gillette Stadium unless the town is paid about $7.8 million it estimates for police and other public safety expenses. The board set a March 17 deadline.
AP also reported Gillette is slated to host seven World Cup matches, starting June 13 and running through a July 9 quarterfinal. That is not a neighborhood block party. That is a global circus with real-world logistics and real-world bills.
The playbook Foxborough is resisting: profit up top, costs down below
Put it in F-150 logic. FIFA is the guy who shows up at your tailgate with a camera crew, eats three plates of brisket, declares your cooler “official,” and then hands you the receipt for security and porta-potties. If you squint, you can see the whole business model: keep the revenue streams neat and shove the messy costs onto the locals.
Foxborough is doing the rare thing in modern public life: it is saying “no” out loud, in public, with a number attached.
Boston 26 says it will backstop the costs, but Foxborough wants it airtight
WBUR reported on March 4 that attorneys for Boston 26, the local organizing committee, told the Select Board it is willing to backstop the obligations and pay for what local police and emergency leaders say is necessary. Yet Foxborough still refused to issue the license while related issues get battled out.
And that is the whole point: assurances do not buy squad cars. Commitments do not pay overtime. Foxborough is demanding the boring, old-school thing that keeps towns from getting stuck later: clarity in writing before the permit gets signed.
Final whistle
AP reported the standoff exists because Foxborough says it is not part of FIFA’s hosting agreement with Boston. That is the swamp creature in daylight: glossy agreements up top, liability sliding down the ladder.
If FIFA wants seven matches at Gillette, the security funding should be clean, funded, and locked down before Foxborough issues the license. That is not anti-soccer. That is pro-common sense, with grill smoke in its lungs.
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