Where the World Cup Already Began
Sanghee Gil
The most accurate way to understand American
soccer ahead of the 2026 World Cup
is not to begin by examining a national team roster or a tactical board.
More revealing clues are found instead inside a stadium in Harrison New Jersey
the venue long known as Red Bull Arena
now operating under the name Sports Illustrated Stadium.
There, soccer does not exist as an event that is yet to arrive
but as an environment that is already in effect.
Red Bull is no longer an energy drink company.
Nor is it merely a sports sponsor.What Red Bull has built over the past two decades is not a team or a league but an operating language.Across football, Formula One, youth academies, and content platforms a single question runs through every domain.How can a system remain intact even when players change and results fluctuate? On the eve of the 2026 World Cup, this question is no longer theoretical.
Red Bull is already executing its answer repeatedly, on the ground.
