The summer the world's game came to America
For one month in 1994, soccer owned the United States. The country that supposedly didn't care about the sport hosted the FIFA World Cup — and packed its stadiums. The 52 matches across nine cities drew 3,587,538 fans, an average of nearly 69,000 a game. That total is still the highest in World Cup history, set before the field even grew from 24 teams to 32.
It was a gamble that paid off. FIFA had handed the tournament to a nation with no top-flight professional league and a reputation for shrugging at the game the rest of the planet calls football. The crowds settled the argument. Out of that summer came Major League Soccer, launched two years later as a condition of the U.S. hosting.
The U.S. Mint marked the moment the way Congress had taught it to mark big national occasions — with a set of commemorative coins. The 1994 World Cup program ran three pieces: a copper-nickel clad half dollar, a silver dollar, and the gold coin on this page. The gold one was the prize of the set.
