There’s a stadium in Seattle that has, on more than one occasion, made the ground shake. Not metaphorically. Lumen Field’s crowd noise has registered measurable seismic activity, an event so famous in American sports that it earned its own nickname: the Beast Quake. The stadium has twice held the Guinness World Record for the loudest crowd roar at an outdoor venue.
Now that stadium — officially renamed Seattle Stadium for the tournament — is hosting six FIFA World Cup 2026 matches, including a USA group game and a Round of 16 knockout tie on July 6. If there’s one venue in this tournament built to test the limits of how loud a football crowd can actually get, this is it.
Seattle Stadium at a Glance
| Official Tournament Name | Seattle Stadium |
| Primary Name | Lumen Field |
| Location | Downtown Seattle, Washington |
| FIFA World Cup Capacity | 66,925 |
| Playing Surface | Hybrid grass (artificial turf stitched with natural grass) |
| NFL Home Team | Seattle Seahawks |
| MLS Home Team | Seattle Sounders |
| Total World Cup Matches | 6 |
| Knockout Matches | 2 (Round of 32, Round of 16) |
| Round of 16 Date | July 6, 2026 |
| Claim to Fame | Twice held Guinness World Record for loudest outdoor crowd roar |
The Beast Quake — Seattle’s Legendary Roar
To understand what makes Lumen Field different, you have to go back to a moment that has become genuinely legendary in American sports history. During an NFL playoff game, the Seattle Seahawks scored a touchdown that triggered such an explosive, sustained crowd reaction that seismologists nearby actually picked up measurable ground vibrations. The moment was dubbed the “Beast Quake,” and it cemented Lumen Field’s reputation as one of the loudest, most intense sporting environments in the world.

That wasn’t a one-off. The stadium has twice been recognised by Guinness World Records for the loudest crowd roar ever recorded at an outdoor sports venue. Both the Seahawks (NFL) and Seattle Sounders (MLS) play here, and both fanbases have built a genuine culture around generating noise — coordinated chants, the famous “12th Man” flag-raising tradition, and a crowd that treats noise as a competitive weapon.
| Beast Quake Legacy | Detail |
|---|---|
| Origin | Seismic activity recorded during a Seahawks NFL playoff touchdown celebration |
| Guinness World Record | Held twice for loudest outdoor stadium crowd roar |
| Home tenants | Seattle Seahawks (NFL), Seattle Sounders (MLS) |
| Fan culture | “12th Man” tradition — fans as a genuine competitive factor |
When the World Cup arrives, that culture doesn’t disappear. If anything, a sold-out crowd watching international knockout football could push the noise levels even further than American football ever has.
A Pitch Built for Seattle’s Climate
Seattle is famous for its rain, and Lumen Field’s playing surface reflects that reality. The stadium uses a hybrid grass system — artificial turf fibres stitched together with real natural grass — designed to hold up against heavy use and wet conditions while still meeting FIFA’s standards for top-level football.
| Surface Feature | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Hybrid construction | Combines durability of turf with playability of natural grass |
| FIFA-standard quality | Meets requirements for international football |
| Weather resistance | Built to handle Seattle’s frequent rain |
| Player safety | Reduced injury risk compared to pure artificial turf |
For a stadium hosting six matches across several weeks, much of it during a Pacific Northwest summer that can still bring rain showers, having a surface engineered for these specific conditions matters.
The Full Match Schedule
| Date | Stage | Match | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 15, 2026 | Group Stage | Belgium vs. Egypt | Group stage opener |
| June 19, 2026 | Group Stage | USA vs. Australia | USA’s group stage match |
| June 24, 2026 | Group Stage | Qatar vs. Bosnia & Herzegovina | Group stage |
| June 26, 2026 | Group Stage | Egypt vs. Iran | Group stage |
| July 1, 2026 | Round of 32 | Group G Winner vs. Third Place qualifier | First knockout round |
| July 6, 2026 | Round of 16 | TBD vs. TBD | Last 16 |
The opening match — Belgium vs. Egypt on June 15 — pairs one of Europe’s most talented squads against Mohamed Salah’s Egypt, a side with real quality and one of the most recognisable stars in world football leading the attack.
Then, on June 19, comes the match Seattle fans will circle on their calendars: USA vs. Australia. For American supporters, watching their national team play a World Cup group match in front of a Lumen Field crowd that already knows how to be the loudest in the country is about as good a home advantage scenario as exists anywhere in this tournament.
USA vs. Australia — Seattle’s Big Night
The United States plays three confirmed group stage matches across the tournament, and Lumen Field gets one of them. Combined with their other matches against Paraguay (SoFi Stadium) and Turkey (also SoFi Stadium), this Seattle fixture against Australia gives the host nation a genuine West Coast leg to their group stage journey.
| USA Group Stage Match | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| USA vs. Paraguay | June 12, 2026 | SoFi Stadium (Los Angeles) |
| USA vs. Australia | June 19, 2026 | Lumen Field (Seattle) |
| Turkey vs. USA | June 25, 2026 | SoFi Stadium (Los Angeles) |
Australia are a genuinely competitive side with several Premier League and European-based players, so this isn’t a routine fixture for the Americans. Combined with the noise levels Lumen Field is known for, this match has the potential to be one of the most electric atmospheres of the entire group stage — for either team.
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A Truly International Group Stage Lineup
Beyond the USA match, Seattle’s confirmed fixtures bring together a genuinely diverse mix of football nations:
| Date | Nations | Confederation Mix |
|---|---|---|
| June 15 | Belgium, Egypt | UEFA vs. CAF |
| June 19 | USA, Australia | CONCACAF vs. AFC |
| June 24 | Qatar, Bosnia & Herzegovina | AFC vs. UEFA |
| June 26 | Egypt, Iran | CAF vs. AFC |
Egypt actually plays twice at Lumen Field across the group stage — first against Belgium, then later against Iran — giving Egyptian fans in the Pacific Northwest two separate chances to watch Mohamed Salah and his teammates compete on home soil for the supporters.
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The Knockout Stage — Round of 32 and Round of 16
Seattle’s tournament doesn’t end with the group stage. The venue hosts two knockout matches: a Round of 32 tie on July 1, bringing together the winner of Group G and a third-place qualifying team, followed by a Round of 16 match on July 6.
| Knockout Match | Date | Stage |
|---|---|---|
| Round of 32 | July 1, 2026 | First knockout round |
| Round of 16 | July 6, 2026 | Last 16 teams |
By the time the Round of 16 arrives, the tournament has been whittled down significantly. Whatever two teams play that match at Lumen Field will know that a loss ends their World Cup campaign entirely — and they’ll be doing it in front of a crowd with a documented history of generating noise loud enough to register on seismographs.
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Downtown Seattle — Easy to Reach, Easy to Enjoy
One advantage Lumen Field has over many World Cup venues is its location. The stadium sits in downtown Seattle, directly accessible from the city’s waterfront, hotels, and public transit network. Unlike venues that require a lengthy drive or train ride out to a suburban sports complex, fans attending matches here can walk from much of the city centre or use Seattle’s light rail system to get there quickly.
For international visitors flying in for the tournament, that proximity to downtown — with its restaurants, hotels, and waterfront views — makes Seattle one of the more convenient and enjoyable host cities to actually stay in during the World Cup.
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Why Lumen Field Stands Out
In a tournament filled with massive stadiums, domed arenas, and architecturally distinctive venues, Lumen Field’s claim to fame is something different and, in its own way, more visceral: pure, documented, record-breaking noise.
Six matches. A USA group game with home crowd advantage. A Round of 32 and a Round of 16 knockout tie. And a fanbase that has, on at least one occasion, made the actual ground shake with their celebrations.
When the Round of 16 match kicks off on July 6, 2026, with 66,925 fans packed into a stadium already twice recognised by Guinness World Records for crowd noise, the rest of the football world may finally get to experience exactly what a Beast Quake feels like.

