England’s squad arrived at Swope Soccer Village, their World Cup base, to find locals and the local police out in force. Before Thomas Tuchel and his England players departed for the United States, there was talk about their World Cup training ground in Kansas City being too open. It was motivated, in part, by the Southampton spygate scandal. Would England’s rivals be able to steal a glance at them? Tuchel even said the Football Association would seek to erect protective fences.
The nine-pitch facility at Swope Soccer Village is certainly sprawling but here’s the thing. Nobody is getting on site without going past the armed police officers at the entrance. There was a throwaway line from a steward on Saturday as England trained on the complex’s best pitch after flying in from Florida after their pre-tournament camp. “You guys see spying,” he said. “We see personal security.” The latter rather overrides the former. It was safe to say they have it covered.
The buildup to England’s arrival was further coloured by the theft of some of their kit in transit from Florida, including boots and footballs. Again, it did not feel like much of an issue. Everything was recovered; two arrests have been made. “My boots?” said the goalkeeper, Dean Henderson. “I’ve got them on my feet so it’s all good. We got them all back so it’s nice.”
There did not seem to be much to fret about as the players went through a light session that lasted about an hour – if training under blue skies and a blazing sun that pushed the mercury to 29C can be described as light. The second chapter of England’s summer adventure has started and if the focus is about to narrow and the intensity pick up, then the excitement has gone up a few notches, too.
Excitement Builds as First Game Approaches
The opening game against Croatia in Dallas on Wednesday is edging closer and the good news is that England seem to have what they need at Swope and, indeed, their hotel – the four-star, 54-room Inn at Meadowbrook, which is a 20-minute drive away. England always wanted to stay in Kansas City because of its location in the centre of the US and how it would mitigate their travel distances to matches; the plan is to fly in and out for each assignment, the FA having been clear about the benefits of a fixed base, a home.
England were denied the first two picks of Kansas City’s training bases because they were not drawn to play any of their group games here. Argentina and the Netherlands were and the former bagged the best facility – Sporting Kansas City’s performance centre. The latter went for the training ground of the women’s team, the KC Current, which is newer than Swope, perhaps a little slicker-looking. As an aside, a fourth nation – Algeria, who have matches in Kansas City – have ended up at the University of Kansas facility.
Quality Facilities and Warm Welcome
But Swope, which is home to Sporting KC’s second team and their academy sides, ticked the boxes for Tuchel and the FA. It was particularly reassuring to see the quality of the pitch they used on Saturday – in light of scare stories about that aspect of things. England will rely on a different grass surface which is around the back of the main building but the reality is that it is of the same standard. And the standard is high. Local media described all three grass pitches at Swope – the other six are artificial – as among the best in the state. They are absolutely comparable to those that Argentina and the Netherlands will use.
The FA has put a new gym in at Swope and created a lounge for the players and they are happy, too, with the intimate Inn at Meadowbrook, which they have taken over exclusively. There are a number of permanent residents who live in condominiums close to the site and their access to areas such as the principal restaurant will be restricted while England stay there. To say thank you, Tuchel’s players will have a meet-and-greet with them.
The training session at Swope was open to a number of local children, who were specially invited and thrilled to be there. Harry Kane felt a lot of love. “Harry, you’re better than Bellingham,” screamed one overexcited youngster. There were banks of media at one end of the pitch.
Community Spirit and Local Culture
What stood out for England was the warmth of the welcome. Local people were out in force with flags and signs as they drove up to the hotel – a massive police escort having helped them there from the airport. As the players walked in, they heard music from the Kansas City Chiefs’ band and saw the NFL team’s cheerleaders. Even the mascot, KC Wolf, was there.
Kansas City was not supposed to be a host venue for matches but it got the invitation from Fifa after Chicago said no. The people here are overwhelmingly delighted to have been asked. It is a city with a jazz heritage, the birthplace of Charlie Parker. It is a city of fountains, with more than 200 of them, some spectacular. There are 220 parks and 29 lakes. It is a city of barbecued meats, smoked ribs and burnt ends among the specialities. It is a city of charm and friendliness, which has a love affair with the heart symbol, partly because it is in the heart of the US.
“We like to say that we greet people with a smile and a wink,” said one local. More importantly, perhaps, it is a city of sporting passion, headlined by the Chiefs, who have won three of the past seven Super Bowls. Also the baseball team, the Kansas City Royals. Football is big, too, thanks to Sporting KC and the Current, whose CPKC Stadium was the first in the world to be purpose-built exclusively for a professional women’s sports team.
The World Cup fan fest, which has been designed by the global architects Populous and holds 25,000, was rocking on Friday night as the US thrashed Paraguay in their opening World Cup game. Fans enter it through a 65ft-high heart. England intend to thrive off the positive vibes.



